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0z\"\u002F>",true,{"id":36,"title":37,"author":38,"authorsTake":39,"body":40,"category":876,"cefrLevel":877,"date":878,"description":879,"extension":880,"faqs":881,"gcseTier":877,"heroImage":877,"intro":877,"language":877,"lastUpdated":877,"meta":894,"navigation":34,"path":895,"seo":896,"socialDescription":877,"stem":897,"tags":898,"tldr":903,"verbSlugs":877,"__hash__":904},"resources\u002Fresources\u002Ffrench\u002Fhow-to-say-hello-in-french.md","How to Say Hello in French: Bonjour, Salut, and the Regional Variations","Michael McGettrick","My year as an English assistant in Le Havre converted me from someone who had been taught bonjour as a vocabulary item to someone who understood it as a ritual. The conversion happened in a boulangerie in the second week, when I walked in and asked for a baguette without saying bonjour first, and the woman behind the counter responded with a slow, deliberate \"bonjour, monsieur\" that made the temperature in the room drop two degrees. I had broken the protocol. The bread arrived eventually but I learned more about French politeness in that thirty seconds than in five years of school French.\n\nThe position I want to defend, which sits underneath this whole how-to-say cluster, is that politeness vocabulary is the most culturally loaded vocabulary in any language. The literal translation of hello is the easy bit. The hard bit is that bonjour is not really hello, it is \"I acknowledge that we are now in a shared social space and I am behaving as a person should behave in it.\" Skipping it is not just a missing word, it is the equivalent of walking into someone's living room without saying anything at all. The British and American instinct to slide into the transaction reads, in France, as a small act of social aggression.\n\nThe tu \u002F vous decision is the universal load-bearing point in French, and the hello is where it first shows. Defaulting to vous with anyone you have just met, anyone older, anyone in a service role, is the right move and the one English speakers consistently get wrong because they confuse French formality with stiffness. It is not stiffness. It is the language doing the work of marking respect that English does with tone and body language. Use vous, lead with bonjour, switch to bonsoir at dusk, and you will have already moved most of the way out of the foreign-visitor register.\n",{"type":41,"value":42,"toc":848},"minimark",[43,48,57,62,68,71,74,78,81,147,150,153,156,159,162,165,172,175,182,186,189,302,309,313,316,332,335,349,352,355,359,362,427,438,442,449,452,467,470,474,478,495,499,515,519,530,534,544,548,555,585,592,596,599,619,622,630,634,637,673,688,692,778,782,785,805,809],[44,45,47],"h1",{"id":46},"how-to-say-hello-in-french","How to Say Hello in French",[49,50,51,52,56],"p",{},"The default answer is ",[53,54,55],"strong",{},"bonjour"," - \"hello \u002F good day.\" It works in essentially every context across the French-speaking world. But French greeting culture is more time-of-day-sensitive and more formal-register-conscious than English. Using \"bonjour\" at 10pm marks you as a non-native speaker; using \"salut\" with your boss marks you as inappropriately casual. This article covers the basic greetings, the time-of-day register, the formal-informal distinction, regional variations, and how to respond appropriately.",[58,59,61],"h2",{"id":60},"the-basic-greeting","The basic greeting",[49,63,64,67],{},[53,65,66],{},"Bonjour"," - \"hello\" or \"good day.\"",[49,69,70],{},"Pronunciation: bohn-ZHOOR. Two syllables, with the nasal \"on\" and the soft French J.",[49,72,73],{},"Bonjour is the universal default French greeting used until evening (sunset). It functions as \"hello\" in any context: friend to friend, stranger to stranger, customer to shop assistant, professional to client. It is the safest greeting and the one to default to in any uncertain situation.",[58,75,77],{"id":76},"time-of-day-greetings","Time-of-day greetings",[49,79,80],{},"French greeting culture observes the time of day more strictly than English:",[82,83,84,100],"table",{},[85,86,87],"thead",{},[88,89,90,94,97],"tr",{},[91,92,93],"th",{},"Time of day",[91,95,96],{},"Greeting",[91,98,99],{},"Translation",[101,102,103,114,125,136],"tbody",{},[88,104,105,109,111],{},[106,107,108],"td",{},"Morning to early evening",[106,110,66],{},[106,112,113],{},"Good day \u002F Hello",[88,115,116,119,122],{},[106,117,118],{},"Evening (after sunset)",[106,120,121],{},"Bonsoir",[106,123,124],{},"Good evening",[88,126,127,130,133],{},[106,128,129],{},"Bedtime \u002F parting at night",[106,131,132],{},"Bonne nuit",[106,134,135],{},"Good night",[88,137,138,141,144],{},[106,139,140],{},"Casual any time",[106,142,143],{},"Salut",[106,145,146],{},"Hi \u002F Bye",[49,148,149],{},"A few practical notes:",[151,152,66],"h3",{"id":55},[49,154,155],{},"Used throughout the daylight hours. The cut-off is sunset, which varies seasonally but practically means around 18:00-19:00 in summer and 17:00 in winter. Using bonjour after dark sounds slightly off; native speakers switch to bonsoir.",[151,157,121],{"id":158},"bonsoir",[49,160,161],{},"Used as both a greeting and a farewell in the evening. \"Bonsoir!\" entering a shop at 19:00 is the standard greeting; \"bonsoir!\" leaving the shop is the standard farewell. Equivalent to English \"good evening\" as both arrival and departure.",[151,163,132],{"id":164},"bonne-nuit",[49,166,167,168,171],{},"Specifically for going to bed or parting at night when both people will be sleeping soon. ",[53,169,170],{},"Do not use as a greeting"," - using bonne nuit to greet someone marks you as a learner. It is only a farewell.",[151,173,143],{"id":174},"salut",[49,176,177,178,181],{},"The casual all-purpose greeting and farewell. Works at any time of day. Used between friends, peers, and in informal contexts. ",[53,179,180],{},"Do not use"," in formal contexts: with strangers, professionals, in shops, or at work in any formal register. Reserve salut for friends and casual peer interactions.",[58,183,185],{"id":184},"casual-and-informal-greetings-beyond-bonjour","Casual and informal greetings beyond bonjour",[49,187,188],{},"French casual greeting vocabulary is broader than just salut:",[82,190,191,203],{},[85,192,193],{},[88,194,195,198,200],{},[91,196,197],{},"Casual greeting",[91,199,99],{},[91,201,202],{},"Context",[101,204,205,215,226,237,248,259,269,280,291],{},[88,206,207,209,212],{},[106,208,143],{},[106,210,211],{},"Hi (informal)",[106,213,214],{},"Friends, peers",[88,216,217,220,223],{},[106,218,219],{},"Coucou",[106,221,222],{},"Hi (very casual, often used with kids)",[106,224,225],{},"Family, close friends",[88,227,228,231,234],{},[106,229,230],{},"Hey",[106,232,233],{},"Hey (English borrowing)",[106,235,236],{},"Younger speakers",[88,238,239,242,245],{},[106,240,241],{},"Ca va?",[106,243,244],{},"How is it?",[106,246,247],{},"Universal",[88,249,250,253,256],{},[106,251,252],{},"Comment ca va?",[106,254,255],{},"How is it going?",[106,257,258],{},"Slightly more formal",[88,260,261,264,267],{},[106,262,263],{},"Comment vas-tu?",[106,265,266],{},"How are you (informal)?",[106,268,247],{},[88,270,271,274,277],{},[106,272,273],{},"Comment allez-vous?",[106,275,276],{},"How are you (formal)?",[106,278,279],{},"Formal",[88,281,282,285,288],{},[106,283,284],{},"Quoi de neuf?",[106,286,287],{},"What's new?",[106,289,290],{},"Casual",[88,292,293,296,299],{},[106,294,295],{},"Ca roule?",[106,297,298],{},"How is it rolling? (informal)",[106,300,301],{},"Casual peer",[49,303,304,305,308],{},"The phrase ",[53,306,307],{},"ca va"," is genuinely fascinating in French: it can be a greeting, a question, an answer, an exclamation, and a casual acknowledgement. \"Ca va?\" \u002F \"Ca va.\" is the most common short exchange in casual French.",[58,310,312],{"id":311},"formal-versus-informal","Formal versus informal",[49,314,315],{},"French has a strict formal-versus-informal distinction in pronouns that affects greetings:",[317,318,319,326],"ul",{},[320,321,322,325],"li",{},[53,323,324],{},"Tu"," (you, informal) - friends, family, peers, children",[320,327,328,331],{},[53,329,330],{},"Vous"," (you, formal) - strangers, elders, professionals, formal contexts",[49,333,334],{},"The greeting itself does not change but the follow-up question does:",[317,336,337,343],{},[320,338,339,342],{},[53,340,341],{},"Bonjour, comment vas-tu?"," (How are you? informal) - tu form",[320,344,345,348],{},[53,346,347],{},"Bonjour, comment allez-vous?"," (How are you? formal) - vous form",[49,350,351],{},"French maintains the formal-informal distinction more strictly than Spanish. In France, vous is universal in business and professional contexts, in shops, restaurants, hotels, with anyone older than you whom you have just met, and often persists for years even with familiar colleagues. The shift to tu (called \"tutoyer\") is generally invited explicitly: \"on peut se tutoyer?\"",[49,353,354],{},"In Quebec, the vous-tu distinction is observed but with somewhat faster transition to tu in commercial and professional contexts.",[58,356,358],{"id":357},"responding-to-greetings","Responding to greetings",[49,360,361],{},"Standard French response patterns:",[82,363,364,375],{},[85,365,366],{},[88,367,368,370,373],{},[91,369,96],{},[91,371,372],{},"Response",[91,374,99],{},[101,376,377,387,397,407,417],{},[88,378,379,381,384],{},[106,380,347],{},[106,382,383],{},"Tres bien, merci. Et vous?",[106,385,386],{},"Very well, thanks. And you?",[88,388,389,391,394],{},[106,390,341],{},[106,392,393],{},"Ca va, merci. Et toi?",[106,395,396],{},"Good, thanks. And you?",[88,398,399,401,404],{},[106,400,241],{},[106,402,403],{},"Ca va. Et toi?",[106,405,406],{},"Good. And you?",[88,408,409,412,414],{},[106,410,411],{},"Salut!",[106,413,411],{},[106,415,416],{},"Hi!",[88,418,419,421,424],{},[106,420,284],{},[106,422,423],{},"Pas grand chose.",[106,425,426],{},"Not much.",[49,428,429,430,433,434,437],{},"The reciprocation rule applies: French speakers nearly always return the \"and you?\" - ",[53,431,432],{},"et vous?"," (formal) or ",[53,435,436],{},"et toi?"," (informal). Cutting off without asking back is technically correct but slightly rude.",[58,439,441],{"id":440},"the-bonjour-rule-in-french-shops-and-service","The bonjour rule in French shops and service",[49,443,444,445,448],{},"Critical for foreign visitors to France: ",[53,446,447],{},"always say bonjour when entering a shop, restaurant, taxi, or any service interaction",". The bonjour rule is one of the most consistently observed French social conventions. Walking into a French boulangerie and asking for bread without first saying \"bonjour\" reads as actively rude.",[49,450,451],{},"The pattern:",[453,454,455,458,461,464],"ol",{},[320,456,457],{},"Enter shop, say \"Bonjour\" (no need to direct at anyone specific).",[320,459,460],{},"The shop assistant returns \"Bonjour\" (or \"Bonsoir\" in evening).",[320,462,463],{},"Now you can ask for what you need.",[320,465,466],{},"When leaving, say \"Merci, au revoir\" or \"Merci, bonne journee\" or \"Merci, bonne soiree.\"",[49,468,469],{},"French rudeness reputation is largely attached to foreigners who skip the bonjour ritual. Following it is the single biggest social-register win you can make as a visitor.",[58,471,473],{"id":472},"regional-variations","Regional variations",[151,475,477],{"id":476},"france","France",[317,479,480,486,489,492],{},[320,481,482,485],{},[53,483,484],{},"Bonjour, salut, ca va"," is the universal French casual greeting trio.",[320,487,488],{},"The bonjour rule (above) is observed strictly in service contexts.",[320,490,491],{},"Use of vous is the default with strangers; tu is reserved for invited intimacy.",[320,493,494],{},"The cheek-kiss (bise) is the standard casual greeting between friends.",[151,496,498],{"id":497},"quebec","Quebec",[317,500,501,506,509,512],{},[320,502,503,505],{},[53,504,484],{}," are universal.",[320,507,508],{},"The Quebec greeting culture is closer to North American casual register: slightly faster transition to tu, less rigid vous defaults in casual commercial settings.",[320,510,511],{},"The Quebec accent (joual) has distinctive pronunciation of common words; greetings retain standard form but with Quebec phonetics.",[320,513,514],{},"\"Allo!\" is used as casual hello in Quebec, particularly on phone and in informal greetings.",[151,516,518],{"id":517},"belgium","Belgium",[317,520,521,524,527],{},[320,522,523],{},"Standard French greetings dominate.",[320,525,526],{},"\"Bonjour\" is universal; \"salut\" widely used informally.",[320,528,529],{},"Belgian French has some unique vocabulary but greetings follow French conventions.",[151,531,533],{"id":532},"switzerland-french-speaking","Switzerland (French-speaking)",[317,535,536,538,541],{},[320,537,523],{},[320,539,540],{},"Swiss French uses \"septante\" (70) and \"nonante\" (90) rather than France's \"soixante-dix\" and \"quatre-vingt-dix\" but greetings follow standard French patterns.",[320,542,543],{},"Slightly more formal register in commercial contexts than France.",[58,545,547],{"id":546},"the-cheek-kiss-greeting","The cheek-kiss greeting",[49,549,550,551,554],{},"In French-speaking culture, the ",[53,552,553],{},"bise"," (cheek-kiss) is the standard casual greeting between friends and acquaintances. The number and direction varies:",[317,556,557,563,569,575,580],{},[320,558,559,562],{},[53,560,561],{},"Paris",": two kisses (one on each cheek), starting with right cheek.",[320,564,565,568],{},[53,566,567],{},"Southern France",": three kisses.",[320,570,571,574],{},[53,572,573],{},"Brittany, Vendee",": four kisses.",[320,576,577,579],{},[53,578,498],{},": two kisses.",[320,581,582,584],{},[53,583,518],{},": one kiss or three kisses depending on region.",[49,586,587,588,591],{},"The bise is ",[53,589,590],{},"not a formal greeting",": strangers and formal contexts default to handshake. Between same-sex men, the bise is less common than between mixed-sex pairs or between women. Cultural shifts post-Covid have made the bise less automatic; modern French greeting often uses an air-kiss or skips the cheek-touch.",[58,593,595],{"id":594},"phone-greetings","Phone greetings",[49,597,598],{},"When answering the phone:",[317,600,601,607,613],{},[320,602,603,606],{},[53,604,605],{},"Allo?"," (Hello?) - universal informal",[320,608,609,612],{},[53,610,611],{},"Bonjour, X a l'appareil"," - \"Good day, X speaking\" - formal business",[320,614,615,618],{},[53,616,617],{},"Oui?"," - \"Yes?\" - casual",[49,620,621],{},"When making the call, after the other person picks up:",[317,623,624],{},[320,625,626,629],{},[53,627,628],{},"Bonjour, c'est X."," - \"Hello, this is X.\"",[58,631,633],{"id":632},"greeting-in-writing","Greeting in writing",[49,635,636],{},"Email and message greetings:",[317,638,639,649,657,665],{},[320,640,641,648],{},[53,642,643,644],{},"Bonjour ",[645,646,647],"span",{},"name"," - moderate formal default",[320,650,651,656],{},[53,652,653,654],{},"Cher \u002F Chere ",[645,655,647],{}," - formal \"Dear\"",[320,658,659,664],{},[53,660,661,662],{},"Salut ",[645,663,647],{}," - casual",[320,666,667,672],{},[53,668,669,670],{},"Coucou ",[645,671,647],{}," - very casual",[49,674,675,676,679,680,683,684,687],{},"Email closings: ",[53,677,678],{},"Cordialement"," (Cordially), ",[53,681,682],{},"Bien cordialement"," (Best cordially), ",[53,685,686],{},"Salutations distinguees"," (Distinguished greetings) for very formal.",[58,689,691],{"id":690},"a-few-useful-related-phrases","A few useful related phrases",[82,693,694,704],{},[85,695,696],{},[88,697,698,701],{},[91,699,700],{},"Phrase",[91,702,703],{},"Meaning",[101,705,706,714,722,730,738,746,754,762,770],{},[88,707,708,711],{},[106,709,710],{},"Enchante \u002F Enchantee",[106,712,713],{},"Pleased (to meet you, gender-agreeing)",[88,715,716,719],{},[106,717,718],{},"Ravi(e) de vous rencontrer",[106,720,721],{},"Pleased to meet you (formal)",[88,723,724,727],{},[106,725,726],{},"Bienvenue",[106,728,729],{},"Welcome",[88,731,732,735],{},[106,733,734],{},"Au revoir",[106,736,737],{},"Goodbye",[88,739,740,743],{},[106,741,742],{},"A bientot",[106,744,745],{},"See you soon",[88,747,748,751],{},[106,749,750],{},"A demain",[106,752,753],{},"See you tomorrow",[88,755,756,759],{},[106,757,758],{},"A tout a l'heure",[106,760,761],{},"See you in a bit (later today)",[88,763,764,767],{},[106,765,766],{},"Bonne journee",[106,768,769],{},"Have a good day (departure)",[88,771,772,775],{},[106,773,774],{},"Bonne soiree",[106,776,777],{},"Have a good evening (departure)",[58,779,781],{"id":780},"how-to-actually-internalise-these","How to actually internalise these",[49,783,784],{},"Three practical recommendations:",[453,786,787,793,799],{},[320,788,789,792],{},[53,790,791],{},"Always start service interactions with bonjour."," No exceptions, no shortcuts. The bonjour rule is the single biggest social-register win a French learner can make.",[320,794,795,798],{},[53,796,797],{},"Default to vous with new people."," Never pre-emptively use tu with strangers, older people, or in any business context. Let the shift to tu come as an explicit invitation.",[320,800,801,804],{},[53,802,803],{},"Switch to bonsoir at dusk."," Bonjour after dark reads as clearly non-native. The shift around 18:00-19:00 (later in summer) is a small calibration that meaningfully improves your French.",[58,806,808],{"id":807},"cross-references","Cross-references",[317,810,811,820,827,834,841],{},[320,812,813,814,819],{},"The ",[815,816,818],"a",{"href":817},"\u002Ffrench","French for adult learners pillar"," covers the wider French learning approach.",[320,821,813,822,826],{},[815,823,825],{"href":824},"\u002Ffrench\u002Faccents","French accents guide"," covers the regional variety choice in detail.",[320,828,813,829,833],{},[815,830,832],{"href":831},"\u002Ffrench\u002Fgrammar","French grammar cheatsheet"," covers the structures underlying these greetings.",[320,835,813,836,840],{},[815,837,839],{"href":838},"\u002Fresources\u002Fhow-to-say-thank-you-in-french","how to say thank you in French article"," covers the gratitude vocabulary that pairs with greetings.",[320,842,813,843,847],{},[815,844,846],{"href":845},"\u002Fresources\u002Fcommon-mistakes-french-english-speakers","common mistakes for English speakers in French article"," covers register and vocabulary gaps that frequently affect greeting interactions.",{"title":849,"searchDepth":850,"depth":850,"links":851},"",2,[852,853,860,861,862,863,864,870,871,872,873,874,875],{"id":60,"depth":850,"text":61},{"id":76,"depth":850,"text":77,"children":854},[855,857,858,859],{"id":55,"depth":856,"text":66},3,{"id":158,"depth":856,"text":121},{"id":164,"depth":856,"text":132},{"id":174,"depth":856,"text":143},{"id":184,"depth":850,"text":185},{"id":311,"depth":850,"text":312},{"id":357,"depth":850,"text":358},{"id":440,"depth":850,"text":441},{"id":472,"depth":850,"text":473,"children":865},[866,867,868,869],{"id":476,"depth":856,"text":477},{"id":497,"depth":856,"text":498},{"id":517,"depth":856,"text":518},{"id":532,"depth":856,"text":533},{"id":546,"depth":850,"text":547},{"id":594,"depth":850,"text":595},{"id":632,"depth":850,"text":633},{"id":690,"depth":850,"text":691},{"id":780,"depth":850,"text":781},{"id":807,"depth":850,"text":808},"Methodology",null,"2026-06-05T00:00:00+00:00","How to say hello in French across regions and registers. Bonjour, salut, bonsoir, the formal and informal greetings, and regional variations across France, Quebec, Belgium and Switzerland.","md",[882,885,888,891],{"q":883,"a":884},"Why do French people seem to expect bonjour before anything else?","Because in France bonjour is not just a greeting, it is the acknowledgement that a social interaction is starting. Walking into a shop and asking for what you want without bonjour reads as treating the shopkeeper as a vending machine rather than a person. The bonjour rule is observed strictly in service contexts and skipping it is the single most consistent source of the French-are-rude reputation that tourists report.",{"q":886,"a":887},"When do you switch from bonjour to bonsoir?","At dusk, which practically means around 18:00 to 19:00 in summer and 17:00 in winter. The cut-off is sunset rather than a fixed clock time, so it shifts seasonally. Using bonjour after dark reads as clearly non-native; native speakers switch reflexively as the light goes. Bonne nuit is goodnight only, never a greeting.",{"q":889,"a":890},"Is it ever okay to say salut to someone older or in a shop?","No. Salut is genuinely casual and reserved for friends, family, peers and contexts where you have already established the informal tu. Using salut with strangers, older people, shop assistants or anyone in a service role reads as inappropriately familiar at best and rude at worst. Bonjour is the safe default with anyone you address as vous.",{"q":892,"a":893},"Should I do the cheek-kiss when I meet someone in France?","Not as a first move. The bise is a casual greeting between friends and acquaintances, not a formal one. Strangers, business contacts and first introductions default to a handshake. Let the French person initiate the bise if they want one; doing it pre-emptively with someone you have just met can read as invasive, particularly post-Covid where the bise has become noticeably less automatic.",{},"\u002Fresources\u002Ffrench\u002Fhow-to-say-hello-in-french",{"title":37,"description":879},"resources\u002Ffrench\u002Fhow-to-say-hello-in-french",[899,900,901,902],"french phrases","french vocabulary","french for beginners","greetings","Bonjour is the daytime universal, bonsoir takes over at dusk, salut is friends-only, and the bonjour rule (always greet when entering a shop) is the single most consequential French politeness convention; ignoring it is the source of most of the French-are-rude tourist reputation.","81_aIMeEuSKKK4oKIIQxC555LcO5xMSbgkXlyxt1DOQ",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":906},"\u003Cpath fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\" d=\"M10 18v-7m1.119-8.795a2 2 0 0 1 1.762 0l7.84 3.846A.5.5 0 0 1 20.5 7h-17a.5.5 0 0 1-.22-.949zM14 18v-7m4 7v-7M3 22h18M6 18v-7\"\u002F>",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":908},"\u003Cg fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\">\u003Cpath d=\"M12 15V3m9 12v4a2 2 0 0 1-2 2H5a2 2 0 0 1-2-2v-4\"\u002F>\u003Cpath d=\"m7 10l5 5l5-5\"\u002F>\u003C\u002Fg>",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":910},"\u003Cpath fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\" d=\"M13 21h8M15 5l4 4m2.174-2.188a1 1 0 0 0-3.986-3.987L3.842 16.174a2 2 0 0 0-.5.83l-1.321 4.352a.5.5 0 0 0 .623.622l4.353-1.32a2 2 0 0 0 .83-.497z\"\u002F>",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":912},"\u003Cg fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\">\u003Crect width=\"18\" height=\"18\" x=\"3\" y=\"3\" rx=\"2\" ry=\"2\"\u002F>\u003Ccircle cx=\"9\" cy=\"9\" r=\"2\"\u002F>\u003Cpath d=\"m21 15l-3.086-3.086a2 2 0 0 0-2.828 0L6 21\"\u002F>\u003C\u002Fg>",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":914},"\u003Cg fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\">\u003Cpath d=\"M6 22a2 2 0 0 1-2-2V4a2 2 0 0 1 2-2h8a2.4 2.4 0 0 1 1.704.706l3.588 3.588A2.4 2.4 0 0 1 20 8v12a2 2 0 0 1-2 2z\"\u002F>\u003Cpath d=\"M14 2v5a1 1 0 0 0 1 1h5M10 9H8m8 4H8m8 4H8\"\u002F>\u003C\u002Fg>",1781531946455]