Dog or sausage in some other languages American Hot dog (pronounced /ht d/ in English) Arabic: نَقَانِق Brazilian Portuguese: cachorro-quente. In Chinese: ″hot dog″ in its Croatian form. Czech: párek v rohlíku. ″hot dog″ in its original language, Czech volume_up. párek v rohlíku. vuřt v housce. Are there swear words in the Czech language? And […]
Greeting & Farewell in Czech. Home > Learn a new language with App2Brain > Learn Czech > Greeting & Farewell in Czech. Before we take a deep dive into Czech conversations, let’s get some basics down. This lesson will teach you how to say hello, goodbye, see you tomorrow and other useful phrases in Czech.Wishing a person peace is a beautiful way to begin a conversation. Many Arabic-influenced languages (as well as others), use “Peace” or “Peace be with you” for “Hello”: Arabic: السلام عليكم (al salaam aliykhum) Korean: 안녕하세요 (an-nyeong-ha-se-yo) Hebrew: שלום (shalom) Azeri (Azerbaijani): Salam. The town I live in has about 20,000 people in it, and like that it is normal to say hello to people on a road where you don't see people that often, but not on the main road where you'd have to say it every 30 seconds. You usualy say halo to tourist you meet on tourist paths as long as its nos crowded.. also when you enter small shop. To say my name is … you say volám sa …. Literally this phrase means (I) call myself …. Neat, you guys have the same first names! No tak ahoj is a little embellishment which the Slovak language is full off. It means, roughly, well, in that case, hi. Mišo next introduces his (female) friend Lucia. A tu je is and here is.
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