спасибо [spasibo]
Spasibo (Thanks) chto(for) sprosil'(asking). Sprosil'(for men) can also be as sprosila( for women).
Ya lyublu Isac. Note, this is only the pronunciation. (elljell10: thanks!!)
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.
It means 'thanks' in Russian
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.
In Russian Thanks is "Spasiba" Said Spa-si-ba
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.
To say sweetheart in Russian you say dorogaya. To say I love you in Russian you would say, Ya lyublyu tebya.
How do you say "Dylan Smith" in Russian?
Trenatsat is how you say thirteen in Russian.
this how you say animal in Russian животное