*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)