Thank you (female)
It has two meanings 1) it means "thank you" ( for a female) a man says "obrigado". Also it means something that is imposed by law, or something that someone is forced to do. ( Only for females)
Obrigado is the portuguese word for "thank you". There's no brazilian, there's only portuguese
The language spoken in Brazil is Portuguese - not Brazilian. The word "friend" in Portuguese is "amigo" (male) or "amiga" (female).
In Brazilian Portuguese, "vle" is an abbreviation of "valeu," which is a slang term used to express gratitude or thanks. It is commonly used in informal conversations, particularly in text messages or social media.
I suppose it is an Italian word, meaning trustworthy, reliable, trusted
It has two meanings 1) it means "thank you" ( for a female) a man says "obrigado". Also it means something that is imposed by law, or something that someone is forced to do. ( Only for females)
Obrigado is the portuguese word for "thank you". There's no brazilian, there's only portuguese
Yes, a female can say "muito obrigada" in Portuguese, which means "thank you very much." The word "obrigada" is the feminine form of the word for "thankful." If a male were speaking, he would say "muito obrigado."
The language spoken in Brazil is Portuguese - not Brazilian. The word "friend" in Portuguese is "amigo" (male) or "amiga" (female).
The official language of Brazil is Portuguese - "mom" or "mammy" (child's word for Mother) is "mamãe" in Portuguese.
In Brazilian Portuguese, "vle" is an abbreviation of "valeu," which is a slang term used to express gratitude or thanks. It is commonly used in informal conversations, particularly in text messages or social media.
meaning of wills
I suppose it is an Italian word, meaning trustworthy, reliable, trusted
.What is the language of this word?
Neselettle is not a word and has no meaning in the English language.
The Brazilian Portuguese equivalent of the English question 'How are you' is Como vai voce?, or Como vai? The Portuguese pronunciation is the following: KOH-moo vi voh-SAY. The word-by-word meaning of the sentence in Portuguese is the following: 'como' means 'how'; 'vai' 'goes'; and 'voce' 'you'. In Portuguese, subject pronouns don't have to be used if the meaning is clear. For the ending -i tells listeners that the speaker is one of the third person choices of 'he', 'she', 'it', or 'you'.
The word "rabbet" comes to the English language from the Old French language word "rabbat", meaning "a recess in a wall".