Each "a" sounds like the "a" in "father," but is not elongated. So, it is pronounced running the sounds all together, and placing primary emphasis on the third syllable and secondary emphasis in the first syllable.
haggadah = הגדה
First, keep in mind that the H and Ch in hag sameach are the same sound as the Ch in Bach or Loch Ness. Second, the A in Hag is like the A in Bach, softer than the A in bag. Divide the syllables in sameach as sa-may-ach, and put the emphasis on ach.
You say "Hag Hanukkah sameach" in response.
If by "hag" you mean witch, that's "majo" and you pronounce it: mah-joh
hag/i = Hagia
Chag sameach means "Happy holiday" in Hebrew. Chag is the Hebrew word for holiday, sameach is the Hebrew word for happy. Chag sameach is the traditional greeting among Jews before any holiday.
HA-gy is what Hebrew translation has. Prounounced- HAG-eye
Chang Sameach
"Chag sameach" is the generic and most common Hebrew greeting for Passover, as well as Succot (the Feast of Booths) and Shavuot (Pentecost or the Feast of Weeks). Both of the "ch" sounds are as in Bach or Loch. Lazy English speakers would pronounce it "hag sa-may-ak" with the accent on the "may" syllable. Translation: the word "Chag" means pilgrimage (compare with the Arabic Hajj, which means the same thing). In the Jewish tradition, all Jews were supposed to make pilgrimages to Jerusalem on Passover, Succot and Shavuot, and when the Temple still stood, many did. "Sameach" just means happy.
sameach
The Sea Hag's name in Popeye is simply "The Sea Hag."
מזל טוב מאט from right to left of course...
you would pronounce it "Yom Huledat Sameach yakar" so ya, hope that is some help b.t.w, Yom means day, Sameach means happy, and yakar means love, or dear, so you are pretty much saying day happy dear!
"Lo sameach"