I think it is the same as standard tibetan which is "Thukje che"........Tibetans be it from Utsang Kham or Amdo pharases like THank you remains the same
In the Bicol dialect, "Thank you" is "Salamat."
In Hausa dialect, you can say thank you by saying "Na gode."
In the Waray dialect, "thank you" is expressed as "salamat."
"Taudi", of "Tavdi", somewhat depending on the dialect.
It usually varies. Some say Daalu, others say Imeela. I normally use Daalu :)
In the Bicol dialect, "Thank you" is "Salamat."
In Hausa dialect, you can say thank you by saying "Na gode."
In the Waray dialect, "thank you" is expressed as "salamat."
"Taudi", of "Tavdi", somewhat depending on the dialect.
It usually varies. Some say Daalu, others say Imeela. I normally use Daalu :)
Patois is a Jamaican language dialect. To say the English phrase 'thank you' in Jamaican patois one would say the phrase 'tenk yuh'.
Moroccans speak a dialect of Arabic, so Thank You is Shukran (شكراً).
English is the language of Jamaica. Patois is just a dialect of English. Thank you is the same in standard English as it is in Patois English.
Barabados is an English-speaking country. The Bajan dialect is also based on English. So you would say "Thank you"
Halito Halito, chim achukma? - Hello, how are you?
Inuktitut (south Baffin dialect) ilaali (You're welcome!)
In the Caribbean dialect, you can say "sista" to refer to a sister.