Spanish may be the most spoken language at home behind English, except in three U.S. states, but the second most-popular, non-English languages used in each state show off the diversity of the United States in unexpected places, whether it's Korean in Alabama or Vietnamese in Kansas.
In French, there is “ça va?”, which can be translated as “it goes?”. It is also a valid response to itself too, so the conversation flow might just be “ça va? ça va.”
In German there is “moin”. And a conversation might go like: “Moin. Moin.” As far as I’m concerned this greeting has no meaning at all. It could be derived from “morgen” (EN: morning), but you can use it at any time. So it’s basically a noise you make to acknowledge someone’s existence at this point. With varying degrees of enthusiasm.
I looked, “Tudo bem?” is a greeting in Brazilian Portuguese, that translates to “everything good?”.
In French, there is “ça va?”, which can be translated as “it goes?”. It is also a valid response to itself too, so the conversation flow might just be “ça va? ça va.”
“How’s it going?”
“It’s going”
Reminds generally of Spanish and porque/por que
Porque === because
Por que === for what?
It’s similar in English, though native speakers probably never notice: it’s literally “be cause”.
All good? All good.
In German there is “moin”. And a conversation might go like: “Moin. Moin.” As far as I’m concerned this greeting has no meaning at all. It could be derived from “morgen” (EN: morning), but you can use it at any time. So it’s basically a noise you make to acknowledge someone’s existence at this point. With varying degrees of enthusiasm.
*Portuguese. We also use it as informal greeting in Portugal, and I’m pretty sure it’s universal to all portuguese speaking countries.