Spasibo (Thanks) chto(for) sprosil'(asking).
Sprosil'(for men) can also be as sprosila( for women).
You can say "Спасибо за вопрос" (Spasibo za vopros) to say "thanks for asking" in Russian.
To say "I love Isaac" in Russian, you would say "Я люблю Исаака" (pronounced as "Ya lyublyu Isaaka").
"Spasibo" in Russian translates to "thank you" in English.
In Russian Thanks is "Spasiba" Said Spa-si-ba
Russian for "Thank you for your help" sounds like "spaSEEba za vAshou POmasch".The sentence "spaSEEba za vAshou POmasch" sounds very polite and formal.Native speakers of Russian usually say more briefly and informally, like "spaSEEba" (thanks) or "bol'shOye spaSEEba" (thanks a lot) or "spaSEEba vam / teebYE" (thank you). All of these forms are also polite.
спасибі pronounce "spa-CI-bah/spa-CI-bi", it's actually a Russian word, but it's the most frequently used way to say 'Thanks'. p.s. the actual way to say it in Ukrainian is 'Dyakooyu', but I can't find the cyrilic for it... sorry.
спасибо [spasibo]
no problem
pretty good, thanks for asking = ziemlich gut, danke der Nachfrage
You're welcome! If you have any more questions, feel free to ask.
To say "I love Isaac" in Russian, you would say "Я люблю Исаака" (pronounced as "Ya lyublyu Isaaka").
Thanks for Asking was created on 2005-07-26.
It depends on a situation. Commonly, "Нет" ('No') or "Спасибо, нет" ('Thanks, no') can be used for negation.
"Spasibo" in Russian translates to "thank you" in English.
In Russian Thanks is "Spasiba" Said Spa-si-ba
Russian for "Thank you for your help" sounds like "spaSEEba za vAshou POmasch".The sentence "spaSEEba za vAshou POmasch" sounds very polite and formal.Native speakers of Russian usually say more briefly and informally, like "spaSEEba" (thanks) or "bol'shOye spaSEEba" (thanks a lot) or "spaSEEba vam / teebYE" (thank you). All of these forms are also polite.
"Thanks for asking!" in English is Grazie della domanda!in Italian.
Say hola back. Hola means hello. They are unlikely to be asking you hello. Thanks:)