Geseende Kersfees is from the language Afrikaans.
Geseende Kersfees is "Merry Christmas" in Afrikaans, a language spoken in South Africa.
There are many languages spoken in Africa, so the way to say "Merry Christmas" would depend on the specific language. For example, in Swahili (spoken in East Africa), you would say "Krismasi Njema," and in Afrikaans (spoken in South Africa), you would say "Geseënde Kersfees."
The Malayalam language. This is an Indian language.
Yes, Bengali is a real language. It is the official language of Bangladesh and the second most spoken language in India. The language is also known as Bangla.
Spoken language, written language, and signed language.
Geseende Kersfees is "Merry Christmas" in Afrikaans, a language spoken in South Africa.
gelukkige Kersfees! (say: kha-likka-kha care-rr-ss fiyas)
Geseënde Kersfees
here's how you say it: Gesëende Kersfees
Geseënde Kersfees
Kersfees (say: care-rr-ss fiyas)
Means Merry Christmas in Afrikaans (from South Africa)
Father Christmas or Santa Claus is Vader Kersfees
Geseënde Kersfees is how you say merry christmas in Africa.
"African" is not a language. Africa is a continent that contains 54 countries and more than 2100 completely different languages. Some estimates place the number of languages at around 3000. If you have any quesitons about African languages, you will have to specify the language. The most prominent languages spoken in Africa are: Afrikaans Amharic Arabic English French Fula Hausa Igbo Oroma Somali Swahili Yoruba Zulu
Some people in Africa call Santa Claus, Santa Claus. However, he is called Father Christmas more often. He may also be called Vaker Kersfees.
He's called Santa Claus. But he's more often known as "Father Christmas." You could aslo use 'Vader Kersfees' or more tongue-in-the-cheeck: 'Krismis Vader' (pronounced exactly the same as 'Christmas Father')