thanks = F. Harry Stowe
It is odd, but that name sounds exactly like eyharisto (ευχαριστώ), which is Greek for "thank you" or "thanks".
Granted, the last syllable should sound more like "Stoh" than "Stowe", but Stowe is easier to remember and the word is perfectly understandable by everyone, even old folk who speak no English at all.
There is no short form of thank you in Greek; one has to use all four syllables (ie. the entire name), whether speaking to a friend, a superior, or a complete stranger.
Efxaristo.
ef-hari-sto
Thank you in Arabic : Shukran
'Thank you' is efcharisto and You're welcome is parakalo
parakalo is please [par-a-ka-lo] efxaristo is thank you [ef-har-ee-sto] if you literally want to say 'please & thank you' its 'parakalo Kai efxaristo'
Είμαι καλά [eeme kala]
Ευχαριστώ ( efharisto ) . Σε ευχαριστώ = Thank you
for please they say please, and for thank you they say thank you...
To say "Thank you" it is: "Misotra". To say "Thank you very much" it is: "Misotra betsaka"
ΞΟ ΟΞ±ΟΞΉΟΟΟ = Thank You
Greek for 'Thank you very much'. It is more usual to say 'Efharisto para poli', but the meaning is equivalent.
THETA a greek letter "the" + "ta" (TA = thank you)
THETA a greek letter "the" + "ta" (TA = thank you)
How do I say thank ylu