There are many native languages spoken in South Africa.
Depends on what you want to say??
taai skoonheid
It depends what you call "South African" if you are thinking of South African English then its hello or in local slang HOWZZZIT!If it is in Xhosa [said kho-sa while clicking your tongue at the top of your mouth] then it is simply Molo [said MO-low] predominant;y the old cape province areas of western, northern and eastern cape.If in Afrikaans literally means African Languagehello: Assebliefgoodbye: BaaiI think this is how you say it. I got my info from this websitehttp://www.geocities.com/mailjohan/African.HTML*****This may blow you mind,You can say... HELLO and GOODBYEWe speak English here in South Africa***** I agree we do speak English but have a variety of other official languages but it is an English country:)
I would say a flamingo
no country developed it, of course, but maybe you could say that the work of Krige started the field. He was South African.
well, that depends, but I would say south africa.
To say "Sleep well" in Hawaiian, you can say "Moe maika'i."
"Goed slapen" is how you say sleep well in Flemish.
"Você dormiu bem?" is how you say "Did you sleep well?" in Portuguese.
In Punjabi, you can say "ਤੁਸੀਂ ਨੇਂਦ ਭਲਾ ਆਇਆ ਸੀ?" which translates to "Did you sleep well?"
In Zulu, you can ask "Uphumile kahle?" which means "Did you sleep well?" To respond, you might say "Ngiphumile kahle," meaning "I slept well." If you didn't sleep well, you could say "Angiphumile kahle," meaning "I didn't sleep well."
How do you say Please feel better and sleep well beautiful!
Depends on what you want to say??
'Today' in Afrikaans is 'Vandag'
taai skoonheid
There are 11 official languages in South Africa and hundreds of minority languages. You would need to be more specific about which South African language you are referring to.
In white South African communities, particularly among Afrikaans speakers, a common way to say goodbye is "Totsiens," which translates to "goodbye." English speakers may simply use "goodbye" or "cheers." In some contexts, people might also say "lekker" to wish someone well as they part ways.