Bonjour, Merci, Au Revoir may be French equivalents of 'Hello', 'Thank you', and 'Goodbye'. The masculine noun 'bonjour' means 'Good day'. The interjection 'merci' means 'Thank you'. The word 'au revoir'combines the preposition'Ã?', the masculine definite article 'le' and the infinitive 'revoir' to mean 'to the seeing again'. All together, they're pronounced 'boh-zhoor', 'mehr-see', and 'oh ruh-vwahr'.
Bonjour and au revoir
bonjour is how you say hello in french
It may be a French transcription of the Hebrew "Shalom" which means "hello", "goodbye" and "peace".
salve=hello vale=goodbye
Hello- Bonjour OR salut Good-Bye- Au revoir
Goodbye: au revoirHello: bonjour/bonsoir (in the evening)Thank you: merci
: Hola Thank you: Gracias Goodbye: Adiós
"Hello" translates to "bonjour" and "goodbye" translates to "au revoir" in French.
"Hello! Goodbye! Thank you! You're welcome!" in English is Ciao! Arrivederci! Grazie! Prego! in Italian.
- Hola Goodbye - Adios Please - Por Favor Thank you - Gracias
"Ciao" (Italian) - used as a casual way of saying both hello and goodbye. "Merci" (French) - means 'thank you.' "Arigato" (Japanese) - means 'thank you.'
"Salut" can be used to mean both hello or goodbye. Note that it is rather informal.
Bonjour and au revoir
Hallo, Danke, Auf Wiedersehen
bonjour is how you say hello in french
Ciao! Come stai? Sì, grazie. Ciao! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Hello! How are you? Yes, thank you. Goodbye!" The greeting ciao means "bye," "goodbye," "hello," or "hi" depending upon the context. The pronunciation will be "tchow KO-mey steye see GRA-tsyey tchow" in Italian.
Ni hao Ji jieng Sie sie