How to say welcome in different languages

Comment  Dire bienvenu dans différentes langues

Welcome: an appropriate adjective or noun We therefore write: “a welcome remark”, “a work reception”. It is the same for the noun of welcome, which designates a person or a thing that one welcomes willingly: it bears the symbol of the feminine and the plural.

How to say welcome in all languages?

How to say welcome in all languages?
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LANGUAGE TRANSLATION
ALBANIAN mire se vini
GERMAN Welcome
ALSATIAN Welcome
FRANÇAIS Welcome
LANGUAGE COUNTRY TRANSLATION
AFRIKAANS South Africa Welcome
ALBANIAN Albania, Kosovo, Macedonia mire se vini

How do you say welcome? Rule 2: When you greet someone (a man or a woman), then “welcome” means an “e” (Welcome then is a noun). Examples: Welcome. Sir, welcome everyone here.

How do you say see you soon in Alsatian? Vocabulary that you must absolutely master when you come to Alsace: see you soon / see you soon. hello bisàmme / hello everyone: güete Morga / good morning (morning)

LANGUAGES Afrikaans
good morning goie more
Good afternoon) Goeie middag
Good evening goeie naand
good night nag goose

How do you say Welcome in Belgian?

How do you say Welcome in Belgian?
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LANGUAGE COUNTRY TRANSLATION
FLEMISH Belgium (Flanders) Welcome
FRANCIQUE LORRAIN France (Lorraine) Welcome

Thanks dat u/i came folded.

“Goedemorgen”, “hoi” and other ways to say hello in Dutch.

SMS, SMS and short messages to welcome you

  • I would like to welcome you.
  • Welcome.
  • Welcome.
  • Welcome, I’m glad to see you here.
  • Can I help you.
  • Can I help you.
  • We look forward to meeting you, welcome.
  • Welcome to you.

How to write the welcome for a boy?. Rule 3: If we call someone welcome in the sense of “we like to welcome, it comes on time”, then “welcome”; is an adjective and therefore corresponds to gender and number. The masculine doesn’t need “e”. Examples: Your brother is welcome in our association.

Why do Belgians say once? The expression is of Germanic origin (Dutch: Kom eens, Kom een ​​keer; German: Come on, beulemans: Viens une fois) and reinforces an affirmation, an injunction, a question in certain regions of France such as Belgium.

How do you say beer in Belgian? More translations in context: Belgian beer, Belgian beer …