nga-ghi-choe-lu-gha
In Dzongkha, you say 'I love you' as "Nga nga gi yuh." The phrase expresses affection and is used similarly to how it is in other languages. Dzongkha is the national language of Bhutan and holds cultural significance in expressing emotions.
Erica is the same in Dzongkha as it is in English.
In Dzongkha, "please" is said as "kuzuzangpo la."
welcome in dzonkha
In Dzongkha, "congratulations" is said as "བྱིན་ཆོག" (byin chog).
Chapsa gati in-na?
In Dzongkha, Bhutan is called "Druk Yul" (འབྲུག་ཡུལ). The term translates to "Land of the Thunder Dragon," reflecting the country's rich cultural heritage and connection to Buddhism. Dzongkha is the national language of Bhutan and is used in government and education.
Dzongkha is the language of Bhutan (or as locally named: Druk).
"I love you" in Dzongkha is said as "ང་ ཁོ་ནང་ལ་དགའ་དེས་བདག་ཅིར་སང་།" which is transliterated as "nga kho nang la dga des bdag ci ra sang."
The Dzongkha word for "sorry" is "khuen" (ཁོངས). It is used to express apologies or regret in various situations. Dzongkha is the national language of Bhutan and is written in the Tibetan script.
Dzongkha is the national language of Bhutan, even though only 20% of the population can speak it.
A plateau region in Asia, Tibet is home to the Tibetans and other ethnic people such as Lhobas, Monpas and Qiang. Tibetans express their affection by saying nga kayrâng-la gawpo yö, which literally translates to "I love you".