Bonjour! You may add monsieur for a man, and mademoiselle for miss.
Salut ( your friend's name) Ca Va?
It means whats up hows it going and only use Salut if its only your friends and people younger than you any one else and it would be considered rude
Bonjour, comment allez-vous?
There is no "good afternoon" formula in French to greet people, only one for when you are leaving. As a greeting, it is standard to use "bonjour", until the evening. You will use "bonsoir" then. When you are departing, you can use "bonne journée" (for the whole day ahead), "bon après-midi" for the rest of the afternoon, or "bonsoir / bonne soirée" when leaving in the evening.
The standard collective noun for furniture is a suite(which rhymes with greet).
Teachers are commonly addressed as 'monsieur' or 'madame' by their students. The usual greeting is then: bonjour monsieur, or bonjour madame.
Good morning, my friend.Note: "Bon matin" is not a greeting and doesn't really mean anything in French. To greet someone in the morning, you say "bonjour".good morning my friends... how are you doing - (note that in French we don't say 'bon matin' as a greeting, only 'bonjour')
Five ways to greet someone in Latin would vary by location and how well you know someone. One way to greet a relative would be to do an air kiss on the cheek or to give a hug. If it is a business acquaintance, one may shake hands. Another way would be to say the word "salve" which means "hello" in Latin. One may also greet someone by using the word "hola".
Salut
Bonjour
bonjure nito
bonjour monsieur
turtle
Bonjour, Monsieur/Madame/Mademoiselle, comment allez-vous?
Margot, which is a nickname for Marguerite("Margaret"), is a French equivalent of the English name "Peggy." The pronunciation in French will be "mar-go" for the diminutive and "mar-greet" for the proper feminine noun.
You don't. You only say Shabbat shalom in Hebrew. If you are asking how French Jews greet each other on Shabbat, they say "Shabbat Shalom"
In Senegal, even though French is the official language, the custom is to greet a person first in Arabic: "Salam aleykoum" (Peace be with you), then is Wolof, "Na nga def?" (How are you?), "Naka sa we ker?" (How is the family?"
You greet the guest first.
You greet people with a kiss on the cheek (or two, three, up to four) when you have a special relationship with them (friendship, family). There is no special reason for that, this is the way people do it here (just as Americans and their hugging, which seems weird to the few French who know about it). Men just shake hands of their male friends.
Clare Greet's birth name is Clara Greet.