There are several replies to merci beaucoup.
Avec plaisir (with pleasure)
De rien (it's nothing)
Bienvenu or vous etes bienvenu (you are welcome)
Je vous en prie ( idiomatic way of saying you're welcome). Often heard.
C'est moi qui vous remercie ( it is me that thanks you)
C'est moi ! (abbreviation of the previous phrase). Verycommon in France.
Avec plasir
"Good, thanks for asking," is the typical response to the question "How are you?" The translation for that type of response in French would be, "Bien, merci pour me demander." You could also abbreviate it as "Bien, merci" -- "Good, thanks".
thank you: merci thank you very much= merci beaucoup you're welcome = de rien / je vous en prie
Thank you = Merci (pronounced as mare-see)Merci
Non Merci
merci vous Answer: A simple "Merci" works, "Merci beaucoup!" (Thanks a lot!) is often heard. "Merci bien" runs the risk of sounding a bit sarcastic.
Merci (thankyou)
De rien
Merci :)
Merci pour votre réponse
In France we usually reply "merci" with a smile. Indeed, or, "c'est gentil".
'de rien' is a standard reply to 'merci' (thanks) which translates roughly as 'no problem' or 'don't mention it'. It is familiar but quite correct.
if you feel like thanking the person:"merci" (thanks)"merci beaucoup" (thank you very much)"c'est très gentil" (that's very kind)
Vous êtes bienvenu - or in reply to merci - je vous en prie How about 'de rien.'
Answer: 'Ça VA?' In reply to that, you could say 'Ça VA bien merci', meaning, 'I'm fine thanks.'
good, thank you and you? best reply when someone says Comment allez-vous? maybe :d
De rien - meaning "it's nothing" je vous en prie- very polite way of saying "you're welcome"
"Good, thanks for asking," is the typical response to the question "How are you?" The translation for that type of response in French would be, "Bien, merci pour me demander." You could also abbreviate it as "Bien, merci" -- "Good, thanks".