Hi In Tagalog - How To Discuss

Hi In Tagalog

Translate hello o o in Tagalog / Filipino? 3

I'm really thinking about it .. and I can't think of anything .. whenever an acquaintance asks me, that's what happens .. um ..> _>

So ... can anyone say hello to me in the Philippines?

We usually say hello or good. But we also politely say hello to a teacher. usta means who are you? What is a debtor?

Philippine Translator

No one i know Filipinos generally speak English equivalent to Tagalog's colloquial words because there is no direct translation or the word Tagalog is too old to use.

For example, when you go to a bank or store or somewhere and someone greets you. I didn't think you were going to call it Magandang Amaga. Maybe then, but I don't think so. You say hello Either shake your head or raise your eyebrows or smile or make a different expression or thunder or whatever.

Now as I think about it, there could be a Filipino non-verbal response equivalent to hello.

Translation or

Our cousins ​​usually speak TagLish, a combination of Tagalog and English. Hello and. We do not translate. We use it the same way. Do we use machine and computer bags because they are soft? Next translation itself, Master. Different meanings, same usage. Casey, when we say usta, we don't really want to know what other people are doing.

Hi In Tagalog

Hi In Tagalog

Forced to switch to responsive mode, yes! You can use it to play video games. Do a contest! Instead of looking at it as a C or a job, you have N with you! Games are good because they don't care what people think of them when they play them ... so they're just as crazy as they want to be.

Can anyone say hello to me in the Philippines?

That's the decent thing to do, and it should end there. Hahaha

The Tagalog word, which corresponds to the English type o, is KAMUSTA ...

Like! Diversity? !!

Sometimes we even use the dictionary as a reference, (hey kamasta ka na?)

Hello and again ...

I don't think there is a straightforward translation, but there are some Filipino greetings like Mabuhay, Magandang Umaga, etc. We also use it to greet someone or to try to start a conversation.

usta na or usta na kayo is more formal or more formal usta po kayo, which literally means w eres tú (from Spanish like this), but it is used as a greeting like o.

wdy yow, hindi ko rin alam eh, a san mo nakuha que profile picture mo nice naman

Hi In Tagalog

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