I assumed they meant thanks but a Google search doesn’t give me that kind of result. What does dinata mean and what language is it from?
I assumed they meant thanks but a Google search doesn’t give me that kind of result. What does dinata mean and what language is it from?
Or “bitteschön” in German.
Dunno how native speakers would do it, but usually I answer “bitte” for “danke”, “bitte schön” for “danke schön”.
Fun fact: saying “bitte” near my cat prompts her to rub her face on your leg. All the time. I speak in German with her, and when she obeys my commands I tell her “bitte” and pet her, so now she associated the word with being petted.
If they “danke schön” me, I’ll usually respond with “darlin’”.
Another fun fact: if you want to say “bitte schön” in Austrian German casual, you can just say “bitchin’.”
I would translate it more closely to ‘keine Mühe’/‘keine Ursache’
Do you happen to know why it’s “keine Ursache”? That is a thing in Danish and Norwegian too (“ingen årsak”) and I always thought it was a weird phrase.
Swedish too. I’ve always assumed the implicit meaning is roughly “there is [no reason] to thank me”.
That makes sense. For some reason, I thought it was something like “no reason to do what I did”. So basically “Sure, totally no ulterior motives here, by the way!”, which seemed kinda weird to me.
Oder “nichts zu danken”.