At the best Lithuanian greeting is shown at the black humor performance the Radio show , where one side person Minde says: Labas, čia Minde skambyja ( hi, here is Minde calling). Minde's "labas" is so special and sounds like [lābàs]. With very long first "a" and disappearing short the second one. Telling in the Lithuania hi in Minde's way ,you will become an irresistible attractive for Lithuanian listeners😄
Thank you for your interest! Unfortunately, I don't have availability to teach at the moment. If there is a particular topic you are interested in, please do let me know!
Goodbye is not "iki". At modern English, especially American one, the "goodbye" is used exclusive as "sudie" or "lik sveikas". And they used it when the leaving potentially can be forever. So at the final episode of Terminator 2 Schwarzenegger would say "sudie" or "likite sveiki"(plural coz to Sarah and John).
@@marieljackman1850yeah, "sekasi" is a verb. "Kaip sekasi?" - huh, how's goin'? The absolutely identical use. In the letter meaning "sektis" - to perform something succesfull. But "sekti" - to sneak behind ,to follow
@@marieljackman1850in genitive case "gero vakaro" is used as bye or have a good evening only. As a greeting - the nominative only. If you wanna bring some element of undefinitness or unclearness, when the company or person are unpleasant for you, you can add "tipo". Na tai tipo labas - well, kinda hi, bro. Gerai, tipo gero vakaro visiems - well, kinda have a good evening everybody. But be carefull, coz it stays on a limit of an insult, when you say "bye" but mean "f*ck you". The Lithuanians otherwise than Americans prefer to express their feelings in hidden forms.
My mom will say kaip tau einas sometimes when she greets us. We always thought it meant how are you but apparently it doesn't. What does it really mean?
The literal translation would be "How is it going?", so you weren't that far off! The word "einas(i)" derived from the verb "eiti" which means "to go".
I’m a 51 year old American whose grandparents emigrated from Lithuania to Chicago, and I’m trying to learn the language - thank you for this video!
Thanks so much, but need more videos ❤
I found interesting the expression "Ate". It sounds like "Até!" in Portuguese, which is a way to say goodbye, because it means literally "Iki". 😄
This is sp nice to learn truck driver from Pensacola Florida
Thank you so much, need more video please
Thank you for this video!
At the best Lithuanian greeting is shown at the black humor performance the Radio show , where one side person Minde says: Labas, čia Minde skambyja ( hi, here is Minde calling). Minde's "labas" is so special and sounds like [lābàs]. With very long first "a" and disappearing short the second one.
Telling in the Lithuania hi in Minde's way ,you will become an irresistible attractive for Lithuanian listeners😄
vitalijus gaidys
Great video
I’d love a video on swear words as well😌
I'm not an expert on this topic but most commonly used swear words are either Russian or English swear words.
Nice, do you have place where we can have classes?
Thank you for your interest! Unfortunately, I don't have availability to teach at the moment. If there is a particular topic you are interested in, please do let me know!
Labas! Sveiki! Kaip sekasi? I'd love to hear your answers in the comments below. Ačiū!
This is so helpful ačiū!
Si, when you say “good evening” etc , Lithuanians use the genitive case, right? Gero vakaro
Is “sekasi” a verb?
Goodbye is not "iki". At modern English, especially American one, the "goodbye" is used exclusive as "sudie" or "lik sveikas". And they used it when the leaving potentially can be forever. So at the final episode of Terminator 2 Schwarzenegger would say "sudie" or "likite sveiki"(plural coz to Sarah and John).
@@marieljackman1850yeah, "sekasi" is a verb. "Kaip sekasi?" - huh, how's goin'? The absolutely identical use.
In the letter meaning "sektis" - to perform something succesfull. But "sekti" - to sneak behind ,to follow
@@marieljackman1850in genitive case "gero vakaro" is used as bye or have a good evening only.
As a greeting - the nominative only.
If you wanna bring some element of undefinitness or unclearness, when the company or person are unpleasant for you, you can add "tipo". Na tai tipo labas - well, kinda hi, bro. Gerai, tipo gero vakaro visiems - well, kinda have a good evening everybody. But be carefull, coz it stays on a limit of an insult, when you say "bye" but mean "f*ck you".
The Lithuanians otherwise than Americans prefer to express their feelings in hidden forms.
1:31
Is “Sveikas” an adjective?
Correct!
My mom will say kaip tau einas sometimes when she greets us. We always thought it meant how are you but apparently it doesn't. What does it really mean?
The literal translation would be "How is it going?", so you weren't that far off! The word "einas(i)" derived from the verb "eiti" which means "to go".
@@lithuanianabroad thank you! 🙂
𝕐𝕖𝕤