This phrase is not commonly used in Chinese. You could say it if you wanted to, but it might sound odd. This sounds like a variation on the 'a thousand apologies' that was ascribed to the Arab and Indian nations, but to be honest, I'm not even sure how valid it is in that context.
The Chinese character 万 wan(4) (lit. 10,000) is typically used to refer to 'many', 'myriad', 'various', 'numerous', or even immeasurably huge quantities, not just for a fixed quantity of 10,000. The phrase that uses the character 万 that is closest in meaning may be this:
Noted with thanks in Chinese
In Chinese, it should be "一万"(yī wàn)
一万 (read as "yi wan").
Oh harrow thanks for the question, we pronounces it ruggage! Harrow and thanks you!
A phrase often used by cowboys to say "Thanks" is: "Much Obliged."
xei xei sou kaan
yeah it did thanks. on oops i deleted it my bad
How do you say what in Mandarin Chinese?I don't even know what you're asking.
不必谢 [bú bì xiè]
Thank you very much. How else do you thank someone?
"Guanxi" is the phonetic spelling for the Chinese phrase meaning "matter". To pronounce the phrase, you would say "gwan she".
It is very formal - most people just say "Thank you," or the informal "Thanks."