Jim carrey in the Truman's show
Bom Dia!=Good day Boa Tarde!=Good Afternoon (after around 2-4pm) Boa Noite=Good Night
“Good morning.” “Good afternoon.” “Good evening.” “It's nice to meet you.” “It's a pleasure to meet you.”
Hey Hi Whats Up? How's it goin'? Good morning Good afternoon Good evening
Hi! ”Good evening” in Twi is “Mema wo adwo” [meh-ma-wah-joe]. Hope this helps! :)
Jim carrey in the Truman's show
Good day can be said any time during daylight hours. You can also say 'good morning' in the morning or 'good afternoon' in the afternoon or 'good evening' in the evening. However at night you may not say 'good night' unless you are going to bed. As a greeting at night you should rather use 'good evening'.
Morning is the early part of the day following sunrise, afternoon is the middle part of the day, typically from noon until evening, evening is the time before nightfall, and night is the time after sunset until sunrise the next day.
We don't really say "good afternoon." For time-specific greetings, we only have morning and night: a-run sa-wad (good morning) ra-tree sa-wad (good night) However, We do have "good evening". Sar-Yan-Sa-Wad = Good evening.
Good evening (late afternoon) is "Kalisphera" (Kah-lee-SPARE-ah), and good evening as in good night is "Kalinichta" (Kah-lee-NEEK-tah).
the answer is that illgal is my best friend so i dont know good night good mournig good afternoon good evening
The phrase 'Boa tarde' is a Portuguese equivalent of 'Good evening' in the late afternoon/early evening, and 'Boa noite' is an equivalent for the late evening/night in the Cariocan accent of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
"Bon soir" in French means "good evening" in English. It is a common greeting used in the evening or late afternoon when wishing someone well.
Good Evening
Hola (pronounced Ola) = Hello in Spanish. Buenos dias = Good morning Buenas tardes = good afternoon/evening Buenas noches = Good night/evening I hope this was useful :)
Good morning (noon/afternoon/evening): Maupay nga aga (udto/kulop/gab-i)
"Good afternoon" is only used after noon. Dusk corresponds to dawn, and refers to the event of the sun setting. Evening is variable in its usage, and is tied both to work schedules and the solar time. It's pretty much always correct to refer to the part of the day when the light begins to wane as "evening".