There are several answers depending on the honorifics:
Polite:
Kamshaeyo
Kamashamnida
Gomawo yo
Komapseumnida
Informal:
Gomawo
Kamsa
The most common would be 감사합니다 (kamsahamnida).
Gohmapseumnida to be formal and Gamsahamnida informally.
There are quite a few different ways to express "thank you" in the Korean language. Some of the most common are:감사합니다 (kamsahamnida)- formal고맙습니다 (komapseumnida) - formal고마워 (gomawo)- casual
"Kamsahamnida" (감사합니다) means "thank you" in Korean.
wae 왜
감사합니다“Thank you” in Korean
No, Korean is not an isolated language. It belongs to the Koreanic language family, which is a small language family with only Korean and a few other related languages.
"Thank you" in Sindhi language is "شكريا" (shukriya).
to communicate well korean language,,and understand what they talkig,,and also speak well their language
감사합니다 = thank you
고마워
Korean was a language that naturally developed on the Korean peninsula. King Saejong the Great was responsible for devising the current Hangeul alphabet for the Korean language. (It previously used the Chinese ideographs -- Hanzi.) Korean is not a created language; it is not Esperanto or Klingon.
"Only for you" is written as "dangsin man-ui" in the Korean language.