You say back off kangaroo your fat ugly and you smell like poo that's been rotting in a hobo's mouth:)
Depending on the circumstances, a reply may not be necessary. If you fell that a reply would be appropriate, base your reply one the circumstances of the departure and the content of the thank you letter. Be sincere and say what you feel but don't go too far. If you don't have anything good to say, don't reply.
Reply is a verb (reply, replies, replied, replying).
鲍勃 [bào bó]
What is the "Business Reply Service"?Business reply letters are unstamped business reply envelopes, postcards, questionnaires, blank reply cards, and reply labels inserted or published in newspapers or magazines, for which the sender pays the postage upon receiving them.
很(heng)忙(mang)
Both are terms, but for different aspects of a reply. You would decide what form and language to use "for the reply to Anne." If you were describing the contents of the reply, not the form, you would say that a word or phrase was "in the reply to Anne."
The German translation of reply is:verb:antwortennounAntwort
To say "please reply to email" in Xhosa, you can say "Ndiphethe kwi-imeyile."
he does not reply to me = il ne me repond pas she does not reply to me = elle ne me repond pas
"谢谢", pronounced "shee-yeh shee-yeh" is the proper way to say "thank you" in Chinese. If someone says that to you, the courteous way to reply is by saying "不用谢", pronounced "boo yung shee-yeh", means "you don't need to thank me".
entfer
say "this is NOT, an appropriate time to say nemaste"
How do you melt cheese would be the best way to reply
It's from the show Psych.
Depending on the circumstances, a reply may not be necessary. If you fell that a reply would be appropriate, base your reply one the circumstances of the departure and the content of the thank you letter. Be sincere and say what you feel but don't go too far. If you don't have anything good to say, don't reply.
Too many words in the Chinese language that phonetically sound like 'la'. Need context to reply further.
Too many words in the Chinese language that phonetically sound like 'men'. Need context to reply further.