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All I know is thank you (Merci) french and (grazie) Italian.

2007-04-13 17:24:18 · 6 answers · asked by Aldo 78522 4 in Society & Culture Languages

6 answers

In French is "de rien" or "je t'en prie" or "je vous en prie" if formal.
In Italian is "prego" or "di niente" or "non fa niente"; in Italian we never use the formal wording to say "you're welcome".

2007-04-13 17:32:02 · answer #1 · answered by martox45 7 · 3 0

In French...

If you're talking to several people or with someone you would use formal language with (stranger, teacher, senior, etc) it's Je vous en prie

if it's casual, it's Je t'en prie

2007-04-14 01:52:51 · answer #2 · answered by xx. 6 · 1 0

In French:
"Je vous en prie" talking to someone you don't know well or to someone who you wish to show respect, also talking to more than one person at once"

OR "Je t'en prie" for friends and younger people".
"De rien" is another possibility which means "Oh, it's nothing"

pronounciation:
Je vous en prie (jeu-vooze-on-pree)
Je t'en prie (jeu-tawn-pree)
De rien (deu-re-en)

2007-04-14 00:28:15 · answer #3 · answered by 2 shy 4 · 2 1

De rien. (French)
Je ne sais pas pour Italian. Je ne parle pas.
Je regrette....

2007-04-14 00:27:05 · answer #4 · answered by summahhh! 4 · 1 2

In French you say: "De rien."
In Italian you say: "Prego".

2007-04-14 00:35:43 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

Italian - il vostro benvenuto
French - votre bienvenue

2007-04-14 01:27:24 · answer #6 · answered by iceball vs. fireball 2 · 1 5

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