grazie per il regalo generoso
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.
'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.
Grazie is thank you. Not sure of ill see you then but see you later would be; A dopo.
"Thank you very much for your generous gift" in English means Grazie mille per il tuo (one person) /vostro (plural) generoso regalo in Italian.
Thank you for your generous gift on the occasion of my Bar Mitvah.
"Michael, I, and the girls thank you for the generous gift." ... that works grammatically. You could switch around the order if you wanted to: "The girls, Michael, and I all thank you..." (with or without "all") "I, Michael, and the girls thank you..." (with or without "all") any of those work grammatically.
You get personal and thank the person for your gift, idea, or thought, ie 'thank you for taking the time out by helping me wtih my college application' or 'thank you for thinking about me' or 'thank you for your generous gift (money), it really came in handy at my time of need.'
Grazie per il bel regalo.
Generoso is the word for generous
Grazie per un regalo monetario! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you for a monetary gift!".Specifically, the interjection grazie is "thank you, thanks". The preposition per means "for". The masculine singular indefinite article un means "a". The masculine noun regalo means "gift". The masculine adjective monetario translates as "monetary".The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsey pe-roon rey-GA-lo MO-ney-TA-ryo" in Italian.
Grazie per il regalo di Natale! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Thank you for the Christmas present!" The courtesy translates literally as "Thank you for the gift of (the) Nativity!" The pronunciation will be "GRA-tsyey pe-reel rey0GA-lo dee na-TA-ley" in Italian.
Formally and politely. Including something along the lines of "...thank you for your generous donation..." and "...your gift is greatly appreciated, and will be used wisely..."
thank you the gift? or thank you for the gift? Answer: AGYAMANAK OR AGYAMANAK DITOY SAGUTMO. AGAYAMANAK MEANS "I THANK YOU." SAGUT IS GIFT."
thank you also for the gift
I really appreciate that you invite us for dinner. Thanks you for your kind invitation. Regards,