'Grazie tantissimo, Professori' is an Italian equivalent of 'Thank you so much, Teachers'. There are actually a couple of options for 'teachers' in Italian. An elementary school teacher is 'maestro', and a high school teacher 'insegnante', in Italian.
Italians do not say: "Thanks a million." They say: "A thousand thanks." GRAZIE MILLE
Grazie per il bel regalo.
Grazie, Jan! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you, Jan!"Specifically, the interjection grazie means "thank you, thanks". Jan serves as an English loan name in Italian. The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey DJAN" in Italian.
Grazie! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you!" The interjection also be rendered into English as "Thanks!" The pronunciation remains "GRA-tsyey" in Italian.
How do I say thank ylu
exactly like this, "thank you for teaching."
Ich danke ihnen fur und lehrt; is how you say thank you for teaching us
Grazie
ringrazio tutto è bello
Grazie, innamorato.
grazie per l'informazione
It's one of the ways to say "thank you" in Italian.
GRAH-tsee-eh is an Italian pronunciation of 'Thank you'. The word in Italian is an interjection. It's common, and much easier to say than one of the conjugated verb forms of the infinitive 'ringraziare' ['to thank, give thanks'].
In Hawaiian, you can say "mahalo no ka aʻo ʻana mai iaʻu" to mean "thank you for teaching me".
grazie per l'olio d'oliva.
The usual way to say thankyou in Italian is Grazie. 'You're welcome' is Prego.
Italians do not say: "Thanks a million." They say: "A thousand thanks." GRAZIE MILLE