In Xhosa, you would say "Wamkelekile ekhaya, sisi." This phrase expresses a warm welcome to a sister returning home. "Wamkelekile" means "welcome," "ekhaya" means "home," and "sisi" means "sister."
Afrikaans = Welkom tuisEnglish = Welcome HomeNdebeleNorthern SothoSothoSwaziTswanaTsongaVendaXhosa = Wamkelekile akhayaZulu = Wamukelekile ekhaya
In Xhosa, you can say "Andikakhohlwa ngento" to express "I haven't forgotten about." This phrase conveys that you still remember or care about the subject in question.
you would say Ukutya okumnandi
"Welcome to ..." is "Tervetuloa ..." in Finnish.
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Afrikaans = Welkom tuisEnglish = Welcome HomeNdebeleNorthern SothoSothoSwaziTswanaTsongaVendaXhosa = Wamkelekile akhayaZulu = Wamukelekile ekhaya
You can say "Dobrodošli kući" in Bosnian, which translates to "Welcome home."
You can say "Enkosi" to say 'thank you' in Xhosa.
welcome home
You could say "welcome back" or "glad to see you home."
"Karibu kumusha" is how you say welcome home in Shona.
mister in xhosa
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
"Green" in Xhosa is "luhlaza."
Welcome Home in Bemba is "Akushika".