There is no exact translation for 'it's my pleasure', but basically it means 'you're welcome', so this is how you say it in Korean.
1. 괜찮아(요)
Romanized: Kwaen-chan-a-(yo)
Read: Kwen-cha-na-(yo)
2. 아니에요 (formal)
Romanized: A-ni-e-yo
Read: Ah-knee-eh-yo
아니야
Romanized: A-ni-ya
Read: Ah-knee-yah
3. 천만에(요)
Romanized: Cheon-man-eh-(yo)
Read: Chawn-mahn-eh-(yo)
Although 천만에(요) is introduced in most textbooks as a way of saying 'you're welcome,' it is considered unnatural and rarely used. It means "in a hundred thousand times", implying that help would be given even if needed a hundred thousand times. However, the other two are much more commonly used. Where there is (요), add it only if talking to a stranger, somebody not too close or somebody older. It can be removed in informal speech; that is, with those who are close or younger than you.
wae 왜
You say "My pleasure" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "Inu midun".
my love
keomyuniti
ama
jeogge
dal
Es ist mir eine Freude.
you say Kevin in Korean the same way you would say it in English. the same with any language
Areumdaun or yehppuh.
Korean spoken language
Seng-gak.