wa-alaykom as'salem
Wa alaikum assalam, which is the traditional Islamic greeting in response to "as-salamu alaykum".
They have many greetings. Here they are in order of popularity:"Salamu Alaykum" = Peace be upon you"Alaykum Al-Salam" = And peace be upon you"Amel Eih?" = How are you doing?"Hamdo lillah" = Thanks be to God."Eih El-Ak'bar?" = What's up/ What are the news?"Hamdo lillah" = Thanks be to God.or "Kollo tamam" = All's fine."Kollo tamam" could also be used as a question, as in "All's fine?".
No, volcanoes do not respond.
Both "I will response to you" and "I will respond to you" are correct, but "I will respond to you" is more commonly used in English. "Response" can be a noun or a verb, while "respond" is strictly a verb.
yes because all living things respond to changes
The proper way to greet someone in Arabic, starting with the phrase "as-salamu alaykum," is to respond with "wa alaykum as-salam," which means "and peace be upon you too."
Wa alaikum assalam, which is the traditional Islamic greeting in response to "as-salamu alaykum".
The correct phrasing is actually "asalaam alikum", not "asa lama lakum". It means "peace be with you." You respond with "wa'alikum asalaam" which means "and unto you peace."
"As-salaamu 'alaykum" is a common greeting in Arabic. It translates to "Peace be upon you" in English.
"Assalamu alaykum" is an Arabic greeting meaning "Peace be upon you." It is written in Arabic as السلام عليكم. When writing it in the Latin alphabet, it can be spelled as "Assalamu alaykum" or "As-salamu alaykum." Both forms are acceptable, but the first version is more commonly used in English-speaking contexts.
Asalaamu elikum 20 of September 2009 eid mubarak
Arabic is the language from which the phrase Salam alaykum comes.Specifically, the phrase is an abbreviated form of As-salamu alaykum. It literally means "Peace be upon you". But it often serves as a kindly equivalent of "good day, hello".
no, its assalomu alaykum
As-salamu alaykum
السلام عليكم
He is brilliant. Assalamu Alaykum.
As-salam Alaykum