נישטאָ פֿאַרוואָס- nishto farvos
boruch habah. (Or booreech habooh, for a different dialect of Yiddish).
זיי געבענטשט, which means "Be blessed" Pronunciation varies according to dialect: Lithuanian: "Zey Gebentsht" Polish/Hungarian: "Zai Gebentsht"
"Jewish" in Yiddish is "ייִדיש" (yidish), pronounced as "yiddish."
To say the word my pleasure in Yiddish, simply say meyn hnah. To write my pleasure in Yiddish, write,מיין הנאה .
In Yiddish, you can say "eynzik" to mean okay.
boruch habah. (Or booreech habooh, for a different dialect of Yiddish).
You can say le-le or liyo.https://www.livinglanguage.com/community/discussion/315/saying-youre-welcome-in-japanese-not-recommended
You just said it yourself. If you want to say it in another language, you need to say which one.
זיי געבענטשט, which means "Be blessed" Pronunciation varies according to dialect: Lithuanian: "Zey Gebentsht" Polish/Hungarian: "Zai Gebentsht"
You say "shukran" which means "thank you".
ברוכים הבאים
당신은 환영합니다 = You are welcome
"Jewish" in Yiddish is "ייִדיש" (yidish), pronounced as "yiddish."
To say the word my pleasure in Yiddish, simply say meyn hnah. To write my pleasure in Yiddish, write,מיין הנאה .
In Yiddish, you can say "eynzik" to mean okay.
In Yiddish, you would say "zay dankbar."
Translation: Plimenik