Do you mean how to greet people in English. This varies according to which English speaking country the person is from.
For more formal greetings : good morning, good day, good evening , hello
For more friendly greetings - Hi . hey , hi ya
and in Australia we say G'day which is an abbreviation of " Good Day "
2006-12-25 16:26:16
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answer #1
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answered by lizzie 5
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If you mean to talk to someone? Well, here are a few things:
Hello, My name is XXX. (Very common)
Greetings M'lady/Sir, I'm am XXX. (More formal)
My deepest regards, I am XXX. (Formal)
Greetings my fair lady/my dignified sir, I am Mr XXX, Son of YYY. (British style)
Yo chandler! I'm XXX. (Informal and only for good friends)
Hiya youngster! My name is XXX. (Informal and can be used in reference to younger people)
Ello Grannie/Granpops! Wassup? (Some grandmothers/grandfathers like this one)
It is a pleasure to see you, I am XXX. (A sweet formal greeting)
I guess that's it.
XXX=Your name
YYY= your dad's name
2006-12-25 17:52:05
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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not quite sure what you mean.
I would address my self as:
Ms. illyanna2
Hello, My name is Ms. illyanna2. I have no royalty title as I am American and a poor American at that.
2006-12-25 16:22:42
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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you would say somehting along the lines of: Hello. My name is...(Or you could just say "Hi, I'm ....)
2006-12-26 06:35:35
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answer #4
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answered by 〜ベラベル〜 4
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