I have a query regarding the use of word only "Greetings" instead of good morning or good evening in the email. As we will be working in different time zones and we will not be sure when the recipient will check the email. So what you suggest whether using the word only "greetings" is better instead of using Good morning or Good evening?Good evening is a greeting used during the evening, approximately after 5:00 to 6:00 pm. The greeting âgood eveningâ is similar to other greetings such as âgood morningâ or âgood afternoon. It is a way of saying âhelloâ and is used when one meets a person or is passing by an individual.
Good afternoon in Thai. To say good afternoon in Thai you would say สวูสŕ¸ŕ¸ľŕ¸ŕ¸ŕ¸ŕ¸ŕšŕ¸˛ŕ¸˘ (sĂ -wĂ t-dee dton-bĂ ai ). dton-bĂ ai means afternoon. Together with sĂ -wĂ t-dee forms âgood afternoonâ. We consider around 1 PM â 5 PM to be afternoon. After 5 PM itâs good evening which we will learn next.
Ouisch's suggestion is the simplest and clearest, but if you want to use a time of day, how about: 1 If they wish you a good morning (their night), then they are aware of the time differences, so you could wish them a good evening to show that you know their time. If you say something like 'And a good evening to you' then it should be clear.