Haben Sie einen guten Abend? = Are you having a good evening?"
It's spelled "guten Abend" and it means "good evening"
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
What do you mean by 'do'? Do you mean as a career, or do you mean 'How can you study history?'
If you mean 44 years, it was Augustus.If you mean 44 years, it was Augustus.If you mean 44 years, it was Augustus.If you mean 44 years, it was Augustus.If you mean 44 years, it was Augustus.If you mean 44 years, it was Augustus.If you mean 44 years, it was Augustus.If you mean 44 years, it was Augustus.If you mean 44 years, it was Augustus.
is mean thank you
It's spelled "guten Abend" and it means "good evening"
(And) Have a nice evening/afternoon
See you soon. Have a good day
hab' noch 'nen schönen Abend translates as have a nice evening but a native speaker would not use it as it is grammatically incorrect and the sentence structure is English.The correct form would be einen schönen Abend noch (have a nice evening), which is an abbreviation of ich wünsche Dir/Euch/Ihnen einen schönen Abend noch.
Doesn't really make sense. "Guten" means "good", "haben" means "have/had". You might have heard wrong on "abend", which means "evening". "Good evening" makes a lot more sense than "good have".
If you want to address a group of people you can say Meine Damen und Herren.Ladies are Damen (a lady=eine Dame), Gentlemen are Herren (a gentleman=ein Herr).The word meine in "meine Damen und Herren" just means "my".It`s also common to say meine sehr geehrten Damen und Herren, literally that would mean "my very honoured ladies and gentlemen". If you are going to perform a magic- or circus-show it`s a classic to say meine sehr verehrten Damen und Herren. That sentence also means "my very honoured ladies and gentlemen", but it`s a bit older.If you write a letter to a company and you don`t know who receives it, you just address the entire staff and write Sehr geehrte Damen und Herren.
To say it ackwardly:Formal: Haben Sie Pläne diesen Abend?Informal: Hast du Pläne diesen Abend?But 'plan' in that case is a formal 'plan'. To mean 'Are you doing anything tonight'Formal: Was machen Sie heute Abend?informal: Was machst du heute Abend?
Plunge right into the New Year!
You might say "GOOTn AWvnt", which incidentally comes straight from the German "Guten Abend".
This sentence is badly constructed,it seems that it is a word for word translation of "Have a great day"The correct wording would be "Ich wünsche Ihnen einen schönen Tag"The meaning is the same but the grammar is greatly improved.
Abend is the German word for "Evening"
"Haben" is the Hispanic equivalent of the meaning to beautiful and funny