Search from various English teachers...
Melaniee
how can I say "hello" in your language?
Apr 4, 2014 5:47 PM
Answers · 3
1
*Arabic - sabbah-el-khair (good morning), masaa-el-khair (good evening), Marhaba (Hello)
* Bavarian and Austrian German - grüß Gott (pronounced gruess gott)
* Bengali — namaskar
* Bulgarian - zdraveite, zdrasti (informal)
* Burmese - mingalarbar
* Catalan - hola (pronounced o-la), bon dia
* Chinese - Cantonese nei ho (pronounced nay ho) Mandarin (pronounced ni hao)
* Croatian - boke (informal)
* Czech - dobré ráno (until about 8 or 9 a.m.), dobrý den (formal), dobrý večer (evening), ahoj
* Danish - hej (informal; pronounced hey), god dag (formal), god aften (evening; formal), hejsa
* Dutch - hoi (very informal), hallo (informal), goedendag (formal)
* English - hello (formal), hi (informal)
* Esperanto - saluton
* Finnish - hyvää päivää (formal), moi or hei (informal), moro (Tamperensis)
* French - salut (informal; silent 't'), bonjour (formal, for daytime use; 'n' as a nasal vowel)
* German - hallo (informal), Guten Tag (formal; pronounced gootan taag), Tag
* Greek - yia sou (pronounced yah-soo; informal), yia sas (formal)
* Hawaiian - aloha
* Hebrew - shalom (means "hello", "goodbye" and "peace"), hi (informal)
* Hindi - namaste (pronounced na-mus-thei), kaise hain (a little formal), kaise ho
* Hindustani - namaste
* Hungarian, Magyar - jo napot
* Icelandic - góðan dag (formal; pronounced gothan dagg), hæ (informal)
* Indonesian - selamat pagi (morning), selamat siang (afternoon), selamat malam (evening)
* Italian - ciào (informal; also means "goodbye"), salve
* Japanese - ohayou gozaimasu (pronounced o-ha-yo go-zai-mass), konnichi wa (pronounced ko-nee-chee-wa; daytime or afternoon)
* Kanien'kéha (Mohawk) - kwe kwe (pronounced gway gway)
April 4, 2014
* Korean - ahn nyeong ha se yo (formal; pronouned ahn-yan-ha-say-yo)
* Kurdish — choni, roj bahsh (day; pronounced rohzj bahsh)
* Lao - sabaidee (pronounced sa-bai-dee)
* Latvian - labdien, sveiki, chau (informal; pronounced chow).
* Lithuanian - laba diena (formal), labas
* Luxembourgish - moïen (pronounced MOY-en)
* Mongolia - sain baina uu? (pronounced saa-yen baya-nu; formal)
* Nepali - namaskar, namaste, k cha (informal), kasto cha
* Norwegian - hei ("hi"), hallo ("hello"), heisann ("hi there"), halloisen (very informal).
* Polish - dzień dobry (formal), witaj (hello) cześć (hi)
* Portuguese - oi, boas, olá or alô (informal)
* Romanian - salut, buna dimineata (formal; morning)
* Russian - pree-vyet (informal), zdravstvuyte (formal; pronounced ZDRA-stvooy-tyeh)
* Samoan - talofa (formal), malo (informal)
* Serbian - zdravo (informal), dobro jutro (morning, pronounced dobro yutro), dobar dan (afternoon)
* Slovak - dobrý deň (formal), ahoj (pronounced ahoy)
* Slovenian — živjo (informal; pronounced zhivyo)
* Spanish - holà (pronounced with a silent 'h': o-la), alo, que pasa (Spain, informal)
* Swedish - hej (informal; pronounced hey), god dag (formal)
* Tagalog (Pilipino - Philippines) - kumusta ka (means "how are you?")
* Tahitian - ia orana
* Telugu - baagunnara (means "how are you?"; formal)
* Thai - sawa dee-ka (said by a female), sawa dee-krap (said by a male)
* Tongan - malo e leilei
* Turkish - merhaba (formal), naber? (Informal)
* Ukranian - dobriy ranuke (formal; morning), dobriy deyn (formal; afternoon), dobriy vechir (formal; evening), pryvit (informal)
* Urdu - adaab
* Vietnamese - xin chào
* Welsh - shwmai (North Wales; pronounced shoe-my)
* Yiddish - sholem aleikhem (literally "may peace be unto you")
* Zulu - sawubona
April 4, 2014
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!
Melaniee
Language Skills
English, Korean, Spanish
Learning Language
English, Korean
Articles You May Also Like

🎃 October Traditions: Halloween, Holidays, and Learning Portuguese
13 likes · 0 Comments

The Curious World of Silent Letters in English
9 likes · 4 Comments

5 Polite Ways to Say “No” at Work
17 likes · 3 Comments
More articles