'O ke Akua au ho'omaika'i mai. Oh keh ah-KOO-wah ou (like "out" without the "t") hoh-(short pause)-oo-my-KAH-(short pause)-ee my. E ho'omaika'i au 'o ke Akua. Eh hoh-(short pause)-oh-my-KAH-(short pause)-ee ou (short pause)-oh keh ah-KOO-wah. Both would work, but the former is the formal way. Also, "e ho'omaika'i au" or simply bless me.
To say "thank you" in Hawaiian, you can say "mahalo." To say "God bless" in Hawaiian, you can say "Ke Akua e hoʻomaikaʻi mai."
god bless you and your family
they speak english, god bless you all.
god bless
god bless you
God bless you and your sister
In Hawaiian, you can say "E mālama aku nō ʻo ia i ke akua, e mālama i nā mea a pau." This translates to "May God bless you and keep you in all things." It's a beautiful expression of goodwill and care for someone's well-being.
You say ... "God Bless This Theater" ... what exactly were you trying to ask here?
We say God bless you as 'Isol nang.na patichina'
God bless you = Gott segne dich (God) bless you! (after a sneeze) = Gesundheit!
In Czech, we say " bůh ti žehnej" . It means the same - god bless you.
Wo do me? Pronounce the "do" as in "dot".