Say Good Morning in Different languages

Posts0Likes0Joined8/7/2018LocationKarachi / PK
Native
Urdu
Learning Arabic - Standard, English, Japanese, Pashto, Chinese - other
Languages | Good morning

Afrikaans = Goeiemôre, Môre


Albanian = Mirëmëngjes


Arabic = صباح الخير


Armenian = Paree looys, Bari luys


Azerbaijani = Sabahınız xeyir


Bengali = shuprobhat


Bulgarian = Dobro utro


Catalan = Bon dia


Chinese = zǎoān


Croatian = Dobro jutro


Danish = God morgen


Dutch = Goede morgen


Esperanto = Bonan matenon


Estonian = Tere hommikust


Finnish = Hyvää huomenta


French = Bonjour


German = Guten Morgen


Greek = Kaliméra


Kalaallisut = Iterluarit / Kumoorn


Hawaiian = Aloha kakahiaka


Hebrew = boker tov


Hindi = Namaste


Hungarian = Jó reggelt (kívánok)


Indonesian = Selamat pagi


Irish (Gaelic) = Dia dhuit/dhaibh ar maidin / Maidin mhaith


Italian = Buongiorno


Japanese = お早うございます (ohayō gozaimasu) お早う (ohayō)


Korean = 안녕하십니까 (annyeong hashimnikka)


Kurdish = Beyanî baş


Lithuanian = Labas rytas


Македонски = Добро утро (Dobro utro)


Malay = Selamat pagi


Maltese = Bonġu / L-għodwa t-tajba / Bonġornu


Nepali = subha prabhat


Norwegian = God morgen


Polish = Dzień dobry


Portuguese = Bom dia


Romanian = Bună dimineaţa


Russian = Доброе утро (Dobroe utro)


Spanish = Buenos días


kiSwahili = Habari ya asubuhi


Swedish = God morgon


Tagalog = Magandang umaga po / Magandang umaga


Taiwanese = 爻早 (gau-tsa)


Thai = สวัสดีครับ/ค่ะ (sawùt dee krúp/kâ)


Turkish = Günaydın


Ukrainian = Доброго ранку (Dobrogo ranku)


Urdu = (subha bākhair) صبح بخير


Uzbek = Hayirli tong


Vietnamese = Chào buổi sáng


Welsh = Bore da

Edited 
1
#1
Posts0Likes0Joined8/7/2018LocationAlmeria / ES
Native
English
Other Arabic - Egyptian, French, German, Spanish

Nice post the Arabic script above says Sabah Alkhayer, In Egypt they often replace Alkhayer for other words to describe the day, for example Sabah Heluwa ( beautiful day) and they can get pretty creative my favourite being Sabah Aasaal literally the day is like honey :) nice imagery 

Posted 
2
#2
Posts0Likes0Joined5/9/2018Locationlahore / PK

How do you say good morning in your language. In my language it is Subha Bkhair. In yours"

Posted 
0
#3
Posts0Likes0Joined4/9/2018LocationCaracas / VE
Native
Spanish
Learning German, Italian
Other English

Buenod días!

Posted 
0
#4
Posts0Likes0Joined5/9/2018Locationmaryland / US
Native
Urdu
Learning Arabic - Gulf

Subha hul khair 

Mariam Irshad

Posted 
0
#5
Posts0Likes0Joined3/9/2018LocationCebu City / PH
Native
Cebuano, English, Tagalog
Other Arabic - Standard, Chinese - Mandarin, Korean, Malay

Maayong buntag!


Cebuano

Maayo = Good

Nga = The/This/It

Buntag = Morning



Posted 
1
#6
Posts0Likes0Joined4/9/2018LocationCaracas / VE
Native
Spanish
Learning German, Italian
Other English

Jess.PWinkler wrote:

Buenod días!

Typo! "Buenos días"

Posted 
0
#7
Posts0Likes0Joined4/9/2018LocationOrlando / US
Native
Cebuano, English, Tagalog
Learning Spanish

Magandang Umaga! 


Maganda- (root word) beautiful/good

Umaga- morning

Sheena

Posted 
1
#8
Posts0Likes0Joined22/9/2018LocationLagos / NG
Native
English
Other French

Sheena wrote:

Magandang Umaga!

Maganda- (root word) beautiful/good

Umaga- morning

This sounds really nice to pronounce.

Anyway, please what country and culture is this language from. Your location states U.S.A.

I think it will be nice to also know the country.

If I was to choose being an animal, I will like to be an Eagle.

Edited 
0
#9
Posts0Likes0Joined3/9/2018LocationManila / PH
Native
English, Tagalog
Other French, Spanish

Smartchiny wrote:

Sheena wrote:

Magandang Umaga!

Maganda- (root word) beautiful/good

Umaga- morning

This sounds really nice to pronounce.

Anyway, please what country and culture is this language from. Your location states U.S.A.

I think it will be nice to also know the country.


This one is the Tagalog language from the Philippines. It is Austronesian in nature, we also have Spanish language influence..

Aleks

Posted 
1
#10
Posts0Likes0Joined22/9/2018LocationLagos / NG
Native
English
Other French

Aleksys.P wrote:

Smartchiny wrote:

Sheena wrote:

Magandang Umaga!

Maganda- (root word) beautiful/good

Umaga- morning

This sounds really nice to pronounce.

Anyway, please what country and culture is this language from. Your location states U.S.A.

I think it will be nice to also know the country.

This one is the Tagalog language from the Philippines. It is Austronesian in nature, we also have Spanish language influence..

OK, I'm lost. What does 'Austronesian' mean? Do you mean Spanish language has an influence on Tagalog?

If I was to choose being an animal, I will like to be an Eagle.

Posted 
0
#11
Posts0Likes0Joined3/9/2018Location

Shub Din in Hindi.

Edited 
0
#12
Posts0Likes0Joined13/7/2018LocationPasig / PH
Native
Tagalog
Learning English, French, Spanish

Casually, in Tagalog.


"Good morning, po!" where the "po" is a way to attach politeness to the phrase. It's kind of like saying "sir" or "ma'am."

Posted 
0
#13
Posts0Likes0Joined4/9/2018LocationOrlando / US
Native
Cebuano, English, Tagalog
Learning Spanish

Smartchiny wrote:

Sheena wrote:

Magandang Umaga!

Maganda- (root word) beautiful/good

Umaga- morning

This sounds really nice to pronounce.

Anyway, please what country and culture is this language from. Your location states U.S.A.

I think it will be nice to also know the country.

Hi! Sorry, I forgot, that is a Filipino Language. I'm a Filipino living in the US, and still proud of my national language Tagalog 

and native dialect Visayan. :hugging_face:

Sheena

Posted 
0
#14
Posts0Likes0Joined4/9/2018LocationLaguna / PH
Native
Tagalog
Other English, Hindi, Japanese

I am half Filipina and half Japanese.


Magandang Umaga and Ohaio Gozaimasu.


 

Posted 
1
#15
Posts0Likes0Joined4/9/2018LocationLaguna / PH
Native
Tagalog
Other English, Hindi, Japanese

Sheena wrote:
Smartchiny wrote:
Sheena wrote:
Magandang Umaga!
Maganda- (root word) beautiful/good
Umaga- morning

This sounds really nice to pronounce.
Anyway, please what country and culture is this language from. Your location states U.S.A.
I think it will be nice to also know the country.
Hi! Sorry, I forgot, that is a Filipino Language. I'm a Filipino living in the US, and still proud of my national language Tagalog
and native dialect Visayan. :hugging_face:



Kudos to you Sheena! Proud Filipina!  

Posted 
1
#16
Posts0Likes0Joined4/9/2018LocationOrlando / US
Native
Cebuano, English, Tagalog
Learning Spanish

VeePerez24 wrote:

Sheena wrote:

Smartchiny wrote:

Sheena wrote:

Magandang Umaga!

Maganda- (root word) beautiful/good

Umaga- morning

This sounds really nice to pronounce.

Anyway, please what country and culture is this language from. Your location states U.S.A.

I think it will be nice to also know the country.

Hi! Sorry, I forgot, that is a Filipino Language. I'm a Filipino living in the US, and still proud of my national language Tagalog

and native dialect Visayan. :hugging_face:

Kudos to you Sheena! Proud Filipina! :heart_eyes:

Thank you Vee! :wink:

Sheena

Posted 
0
#17
Posts0Likes0Joined3/9/2018LocationManila / PH
Native
English, Tagalog
Other French, Spanish

Smartchiny wrote:
Aleksys.P wrote:
Smartchiny wrote:
Sheena wrote:
Magandang Umaga!
Maganda- (root word) beautiful/good
Umaga- morning

This sounds really nice to pronounce.
Anyway, please what country and culture is this language from. Your location states U.S.A.
I think it will be nice to also know the country.

This one is the Tagalog language from the Philippines. It is Austronesian in nature, we also have Spanish language influence..

OK, I'm lost. What does 'Austronesian' mean? Do you mean Spanish language has an influence on Tagalog?


Austronesian is a family of languages where Tagalog falls under. Together with Bahasa Indonesia, Malay, and others.


Tagalog language also have some loan words from the Spanish as a result of colonization. 

Some examples are

mesa (Tagalog) - la mesa (Spanish) - table (English)

kutsara (Tagalog) - la cuchara (Spanish) - spoon (English)

asul (Tagalog loan word) - azul (Spanish) - blue (English) but in formal Tagalog we call it bughaw

Aleks

Posted 
2
#18
Posts1630Likes1092Joined18/3/2018LocationBellingham / US
Native
English
Learning German
Other Chinese - Mandarin, French, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, Tagalog, Thai

Aleksys.P wrote:
la mesa (Spanish) - table (English)
la cuchara (Spanish) - spoon (English)

la = the, so la mesa = the table. That's why it hurts my ears when Tagalog speakers use lamesa as "table" instead of "the table". The other one that gets me is time. For example, in Spanish a las once = at eleven, but in Tagalog alas onse = eleven o'clock. 

In Thailand now. Next up Tanzania and Philippines.

Posted 
0
#19
Posts0Likes0Joined13/7/2018LocationPasig / PH
Native
Tagalog
Learning English, French, Spanish

leosmith wrote:
Aleksys.P wrote:
la mesa (Spanish) - table (English)
la cuchara (Spanish) - spoon (English)

la = the, so la mesa = the table. That's why it hurts my ears when Tagalog speakers use lamesa as "table" instead of "the table". The other one that gets me is time. For example, in Spanish a las once = at eleven, but in Tagalog alas onse = eleven o'clock.

Yes, I imagine it can be quite grating. How do you say eleven o'clock in Spanish?

Posted 
0
#20
    Feedback