Grazie per avermi incontrato stamattina
Ciao! Grazie! Ciao! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Hello! Thank you! Bye!" The courtesy in question models the dual role of meeting and taking leave played by Ciao! The pronunciation will be "tchow GRA-tsyey tchow" in Italian.
Meeting in Italian is "riunione", but has serveral translations depending on the situation.
"No thank you!" in English means No, grazie! in Italian.
The answer is "Thank you for meeting with my colleagues and me." A tip for remembering this usage is to eliminate the word "colleagues." Then the statement becomes, "Thanks for meeting with I," which of course sounds wrong. That tells you that the correct pronoun is "me."
"Why thank you?" in English means Perché grazie? in Italian.
"Thank you, God!" in English means Grazie, Dio! in Italian.
"Thank you, my darling!" in English is Grazie, tesoro mio! in Italian.
"Are we meeting for lunch?" in English is Ci vediamo per pranzo? in Italian.
"Thank you" in Italian is Grazie. "Your welcome" is Il tuo benvenuto.
No, the noun morning is not a plural, it should be a singular possessive form: morning's (the meeting of this morning)Possession is shown by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the singular noun."Here are the notes from this morning's meeting."
"Thank you for adding me!" in English is Ti ringrazio per avermi aggiunto! in Italian.
"A very big thank you!" in English means Grazie mille! in Italian.