"Karibu kumusha" is how you say welcome home in Shona.
You can say "Dobrodošli kući" in Bosnian, which translates to "Welcome home."
You could say "welcome back" or "glad to see you home."
In Wolof, you can say "Sookaru jamm" to mean welcome home.
Welcome Home in Bemba is "Akushika".
"स्वागतम्" (swagatam) is how you say welcome in Nepali.
You can say "Dobrodošli kući" in Bosnian, which translates to "Welcome home."
welcome home
You could say "welcome back" or "glad to see you home."
Hesi/Mhoro, uribho/uriraiti here? (informal) Mhoroi, muriraiti here? (formal) Note: the here is optional in both and not pronounced like hear, for you non-shona speakers, more like her-air.
In Wolof, you can say "Sookaru jamm" to mean welcome home.
you say Akwaaba( which means welcome). Ghanaians normally say welcome in general. so when you want to welcome someone home, just say "Akwaaba" pronounce (A-kwa-a-ba).
welcome back
Welcome Home in Bemba is "Akushika".
"स्वागतम्" (swagatam) is how you say welcome in Nepali.
You can say "velkommen hjem" in Danish to mean "welcome home."
You can say "Mangwanani" in Shona to greet someone in the morning.
To say "hello" in Shona, you would say "Mhoro" or "Mhoroi."