Joke Collection Website - Public benefit messages - You're welcome. How do you say it in English?

You're welcome. How do you say it in English?

You're welcome in English: you're welcome.

Welcome to read French and English [? Verk? M] beautiful [? W? lk? m]

1, the transitive verb means: welcome; Accept with pleasure

2. Being an adjective means: popular; Pleasant; Express gratitude

As a noun, it means: welcome, welcome.

Phrases:

Welcome to join us? Welcome aboard (plane, train, ship, etc.). ); Welcome to join

Welcome to our restaurant? Welcome to our hotel.

3. Welcome dinner? welcoming banquet

4. Welcome party? Welcome party, welcome banquet; welcoming party

Welcome speech? opening remarks

Extended information 1. Usage of welcome:

1, welcome is a transitive verb, followed by a noun, pronoun or gerund as the object, and can also be followed by a verb infinitive as the compound object of complement. Can be used for passive structures. When welcome drives a noun as an object, the gerund can add the possessive or objective case of the noun or pronoun to indicate its logical subject.

2.welcome can also be used as the solution of "free possession, free doing", in which only the predicate is used, followed by an infinitive verb or a phrase caused by the preposition to. Welcome. It can be decorated very much.

3.welcome means "welcome" as an exclamation, a greeting when greeting, used in formal occasions, hung on placards in stations, docks, airports and streets, or used in advertising languages, newspaper titles, etc. Often used with adverbs or prepositions to indicate direction.

Second, the meaning of welcome:

You're welcome, it doesn't matter. It can be interpreted as "you're welcome". But it is used in different occasions: you're welcome is the language to answer the other party's thanks; Never mind is a way to respond to the other person's apology. Try to compare:

1, "Thanks a lot." "You're welcome." "Thank you very much." "You're welcome." ?

2. "Sorry to interrupt you." "It doesn't matter." "Sorry to bother you." "It doesn't matter."