informally: ¿Hablas (tú) español? formally: ¿Habla usted español?
Informally: 난 학교에서 한국말써. Formally: 학교엔 한국말써요.
formally, Sprechen Sie Chinesisch? or, informally Sprichst du Chinesisch?
The main way you do that is to pray. You can do prayer formally as in a religious setting. Or you can just talk to God as you would a person.
It will depend how well you know the person and if they are already a friend or someone important you are being introduced to.Informally you might use hallo or salut, slightly more formally bonjour, or quite formally bonjour monsieur/madame.
the difference is that formal communication is where you speak very professionally. Like you would talk to the queen or prime minister or your boss. informal communication is how you would speak to your friends like:: ""hey yo mate! hows it hanging?!"" but when you speak formally it would be more like:: ""Good Evening, Sir/madam. how are you this fine evening?"" i explained as well as i could :) hope it helped ;)
It's just the way the accent was formed in the original English language, however, not all English people speak in posh accents, you should hear Northern people from England! They speak in a very informal accent, and Londoners don't speak very formally either. I think the most formal speaking area in England is the West.
He formally rejected the merger proposal.He asked her formally to marry him.
it was formally called evil twin
the formally allocated roles are manager
The couple formally announced their engagement at a fancy dinner party last night.
How do you speak it? It's much harder than you think. The German alphabet is just like the American one, plus 4 extra letters. 3 of those letters are regular letters, a, e, and u with 2 dots above them. They are called umlauts (OOM-lowts). The 4th looks like a capital B, but it is a way to replace a double 'S'. To speak German, you must sometimes roll your r's, but you don't have to. There are actually 2 different ways to speak German. Southern Germany speaks German different than Northern Germany. For instance, 'hello' FORMALLY* would translate to 'Guten Tag' in Northern Germany. 'Hello' in Southern Germany FORMALLY is 'Grüß Gott' That is the capital B I talked about earlier. If you are interested in more, I suggest Mango Libraries they are hepling me learn French. :) *Formally meaning that you don't know the person. You regularly in Germany do not speak to someone if you don't know them.