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?
de nada
Spanish phrase
de na·da dā-ˈnä-t͟hä
: of nothing : you’re welcome
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.
Another fun fact: if you want to say “bitte schön” in Austrian German casual, you can just say “bitchin’.”
If they “danke schön” me, I’ll usually respond with “darlin’”.
I would translate it more closely to ‘keine Mühe’/‘keine Ursache’
Oder “nichts zu danken”.
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”.
I prefer the Colombian way of saying thanks.
“Con gusto”
It means “With pleasure”.
Don’t touch my mustache
Just as an additional tidbit, it’s the same in Portuguese as well!
[Additional tidbit]
Pronunciation-wise it’s typically different, although in a weird way - both languages allow some variation depending on the speaker’s variety, but they don’t coincide. For example in Portuguese you could get [dɨˑ’näðɐ̥ˑ], [de’nädɐ], [dʒi’nadɐ̥ˑ], depending on where the speaker is from, but AFAIK you won’t find Spanish-like [ð] without a completely “un-Spanish-like” vowel reduction. In the meantime I kind of expect some Caribbean Spanish speakers to render the expression as [de’nää] de na’a.
Very good point, in hindsight I should probably have clarified I was focusing on the written form when I replied