nice to meet you ="Schön dich kennen zu lernen." (if you meet someone for the first time in a close setting. If you want to greet e.g. your new superior you should use "Schön Sie kennen zu lernen")
Neyess too meet yoo is the way in which 'Nice to meet you' is said. The adjective 'nice' sounds like the English noun 'eye'. But it ends with a soft 's', not a hard 'z', sound. The words in English tend to have their syllables end in consonants, not vowels.
So the phrase isn't said as 'neye-stoo mee-tyoo'. That's the way a Romance language speaker of French, Italian, Portuguese or Spanish may tend to say the phrase. That's because in Romance languages syllables tend to end in vowels.
well i dont know how to spell it but its pronounced (hi-gee-me-mah-shi-teh)
In Romagi it's hagimashita
iie wrong it hajimemashite pronouced( ha-jee-meh-ma-shi-teh)
One says "Piacere" in Italian. Or, in full: "Piacere di conoscerLa."
The answer is NICE TO MET YOU.
Nice to meeting you is improper grammer.
You could say: IT IS NICE TO BE MEETING YOU.
8/1/10
Piacere di conoscerti
Pronounced: pya-chair-e Dee co-no-sher-ti
you say 'nice to meet you too' or some thing along that line
Hello. I'm Angel. I Love You,(:
Prazer em conhece-lo (meeting a male) Prazer em conhece-la (meeting a female)
"I would have said that it was nice to meet you but I'm not a liar."
Although the word "keen" is not commonly used in the 21st century, the time to say the phrase "keen to meet you" is when meeting someone for the first time, at the beginning of the meeting. "Keen on meeting you" or "nice meeting you" is said at the end of the encounter, when saying goodbye.
Well, it is polite after meeting someone, when parting company that one says "nice to have met you."
I'm not sure if this is what you meant to ask, but "Memnun oldum" is something common to say after meeting someone for the first time -- like "Nice to meet you" or "It was a pleasure meeting you" (not a literal translation).
"It's nice to meet you too." or "The same." are reasonable responses.
"nice meeting you" translates to, "leuk je te ontmoeten" in Dutch.
Meeting
A good starting point is "hi" and your name. Think of a question you could ask.
When You First Meet Them.
Memnun oldum=pleased to meet you/nice to meet you
You say "It was nice meeting you" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "mogbadun bi mose pade e".