"nin hao". care for the word "nin". not "ni"
In Mandarin Chinese, you can say "nǎinai hǎo" to greet your grandpa.
Oh, dude, it's elders'! Like, you just add an apostrophe after the 's' when you're talking about something belonging to a group of elders. So, if you're talking about the elders' wisdom or the elders' meeting, that's how you show possession. Easy peasy!
The possessive form is the elders' generosity.
The plural of elder is elders.
The word that means respect for elders is "veneration".
greet means that you should have respect and greet people that are older than you.. repect you elders
greet means that you should have respect and greet people that are older than you.. repect you elders
In Chinese Mandarin, the most common greeting is '你好' [nǐ hǎo]. To be more courteous, say '您好' [nín hǎo] instead, especially when showing repect for elders. In addition, '喂' [wéi] is used to greet people on the phone.
Parents, Elders, Family
The Chinese also strongly believed in the wisdom of the elders and, because of this, older people were greatly respected.
In America, we greet and wave. In Asian countries, we bow to show respect when greeting elders, important people, parents, etc.
to greet women: vanakam amma men: vanakam aiyya
In Mandarin Chinese, you can say "nǎinai hǎo" to greet your grandpa.
The expression is Mandarin for "How are you?" so it would be a Chinese person.
you would normally bow your head (mostly to elders that are older than you) bring your hand together and say "Sat sri akal".
In Chinese, you can say "妈妈,你好" (māmā, nǐ hǎo) to greet your mom.
well they get these red packets that contain some ka-ching in them from elders and lion dances and dragon dances, firecrackers.