"Please be alright (healthy)!" - Kind of said in a way that seems as if it would be said by someone in a search party looking for a missing person "Please, I pray/beg of you to be okay!!"
"i hope everyone is doing well" "私は皆がよくやっている願ってい"
'Tomodachi to kazoku no minasan e, ogenki de yatteimasu to omoimasu.'
Ogenki de itekudasai My Japanese friend always says that to me and it's this Yoi ichinichi o
"flowers in the garden" = "niwa de hana";"there are flowers in the garden" = "niwa ni WA hana ga arimasu";"I saw flowers in the garden" = "niwa de (watashi WA) hana o mimasu"
As far as i know, 'de arimasu' does not have any real meaning. Like Kenshin saying 'oro'. ~Mega³
There actually is no term that is said in Japan after one sneezes. The closest you can come to it is to say, "Daijyoobu?" which means, "Are you okay?" Normally, though, sneezes occur without any subsequent comments.
"De tu" translates to "your" in English.
The English is an English equivalent of 'De Engelse'.
"De que" would be "Of what" in English.
"De quelle" translates to "of which" or "on what" in English.
The indefinite article "de" in Spanish is analogous to the indefinite article "of" in English.
English, dude. English.