The Answer Is Welcome
We don't normally use welcoming words in everyday speech. But in a formal speech to greet visitors one would say "Welcome to Manchester" or wherever. But if people came to your house you would say "Hello. Nice to see you. Won't you please come in"
start with a smile
Hoşgeldin ( informal ) Hoşgeldiniz ( formal )
Formal - Starehe, Informal - Karibu
In Singapore, the term "welcome" can be expressed in a few different languages due to its diverse population. In English, you would say "welcome." In Mandarin Chinese, you would say "欢迎" (huān yíng). In Malay, you would say "selamat datang." And in Tamil, you would say "வரவேற்கின்றேன்" (varavēṟkiṉṟēṉ).
Your welcome is used after you are thanked by someone and there is no after speech after it.
You can say: · Hello = (formal) Bună ziua | (informal) Salut, Ceau/Ciao, Bună. · Welcome = (formal) Bine ați venit! | (informal) Bine ai venit!. "Hello and welcome" could be any combination between those above (of course, formal with formal and informal with informal). "and" is "și" (read as "she").
say will u marry me
Since this is a debate competition, there will a lot of speeches throughout it. It is best to keep the welcome speech short, introduce everybody, say a little something about the event and wish everyone luck!
You can choose to introduce yourself before or after the welcome speech. Doing it before is the usual procedure, however, it is not mandatory. After finalizing your speech, you can say : Thanks for listening, my name is Kate, I am....
'S e ur beatha. (formal). 'S e do bheatha. (informal)
'S e ur beatha. (formal). 'S e do bheatha. (informal)