You could store each language set in a JavaScript file that you include/load as needed. (I've converted the XML data to a "Map" since it is just key/value pairs)
e.g. (just ignore my translations... I just Googled this, I'm by no means fluent in Spanish)
//Spanish File "lang_spanish.js"
var translations = {
"lose_a_turn": "pierde un turno",
"do_not_pass_go": "huele como un camello",
"take_a_card": "tener una tarjeta de",
"you_win_the_game":"sin motocicletas en la biblioteca",
"you_can_not_move":"desbordamiento de la pila puede ser un lugar divertido"
};
In your <head> you can then have a generic script tag, that you just change the source of as needed.
e.g.
<script id="langFile" src="js/lang_english.js"></script>
When you want a different language, just remove this script from the DOM and add your new one. e.g.
function switchLang(langName){
var headTag = document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0];
var scriptFile = document.getElementById('langFile');
headTag.removeChild(scriptFile);
var newScript = document.createElement('script');
newScript.id = 'langFile';
newScript.src = 'js/lang_' + langName + '.js';
headTag.appendChild(newScript);
}
//call with:
switchLang('spanish');
The alternative would be to load all 39 languages by default... but that seems like overkill considering most will only ever want 1 or 2.