- Arabic - sabbah-el-khair (good morning), masaa-el-khair (good evening), Marhaba (Hello)
- Armenian - barev or parev
-
- Basque - kaixo (pronounced kai-show), egun on (morning; pronounced egg-un own), gau on (night; pronounced gow own)
- Bavarian and Austrian German - grüß Gott (pronounced gruess gott), servus (informal; also means "goodbye"; pronounced zair-voos)
- Bengali — namaskar
- Bulgarian - zdraveite, zdrasti (informal)
- Burmese - mingalarbar
- Catalan - hola (pronounced o-la), bon dia (pronounced bon dee-ah)good morning, bona tarda (bona tahr-dah) good afternoon, bona nit (bona neet)good night
- Chamorro - hafa adai (hello/what's up?), hafa? (informal), howzzit bro/bran/prim/che'lu? (informal), sup (informal)and all other English greetings
- Chichewa - moni bambo! (to a male), moni mayi! (to a female)
- Chinese - Cantonese nei ho (pronounced nay ho) Mandarin (pronounced ni hao)
-
- Croatian - boke (informal), dobro jutro (morning), dobar dan (day), dobra većer (evening), laku noć (night)
- Czech - dobré ráno (until about 8 or 9 a.m.), dobrý den (formal), dobrý večer (evening), ahoj (informal; pronounced ahoy)
- Danish - hej (informal; pronounced hey), god dag (formal), god aften (evening; formal), hejsa (very informal).
- 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), bonsoir (good evening; 'n' is a nasal vowel), bonne nuit (good night). There is also "ça va", but this is more often used to mean "how are you?"
- Gaeilge - dia duit (informal; pronounced dee-ah gwitch; literally "God be with you")
- Georgian - gamardjoba
- German - hallo (informal), Guten Tag (formal; pronounced gootan taag), Tag (very informal; pronounced taack).
- Gujarathi - kem che
- Greek - yia sou (pronounced yah-soo; informal), yia sas (formal)
- Hawaiian - aloha
- Hebrew - shalom (means "hello", "goodbye" and "peace"), hi (informal), ma kore? (very informal, literally means "whats happening" or "whats up")
- Hindi - namaste (pronounced na-mus-thei), kaise hain (a little formal), kaise ho (more informal, familiar)
- Hindustani - namaste
- Hungarian, Magyar - jo napot (pronounced yoh naput; daytime; formal), szervusz (pronounced sairvoose; informal)
- Icelandic - góðan dag (formal; pronounced gothan dagg), hæ (informal)
- Igbo - nde-ewo (pronounced enday aywo), nna-ewo (pronounced enna wo)
- Indonesian - selamat pagi (morning), selamat siang (afternoon), selamat malam (evening)
- Italian - ciào (informal; also means "goodbye"), salve, buon giorno (morning; formal), buon pomeriggio (afternoon; formal), buona sera (evening; formal)
- Japanese - ohayou gozaimasu (pronounced o-ha-yo go-zai-mass), konnichi wa (pronounced ko-nee-chee-wa; daytime or afternoon), konban wa (pronounced gong-ban-wa; evening); moshi moshi (pronounced moh-shee moh-shee; when answering the phone); doumo (pronounced doh-moh; informal way of greeting, but means countless other things as well so only use when context makes sense)
- Kanien'kéha (Mohawk) - kwe kwe (pronounced gway gway)
- Kannada - namaskara
- Klingon - nuqneH? [nook-neck] (literally: "what do you want?")
- Korean - ahn nyeong ha se yo (formal; pronouned ahn-yan-ha-say-yo), ahn nyeong (informal; can also be used to mean "goodbye")
- Kurdish — choni, roj bahsh (day; pronounced rohzj bahsh)
- Lao - sabaidee (pronounced sa-bai-dee)
- Latin (Classical) - salve (pronounced sal-way; when talking to one person), salvete (pronounced sal-way-tay; when talking to more than one person)
- Latvian - labdien, sveiki, chau (informal; pronounced chow).
- Lingala - mbote
- Lithuanian - laba diena (formal), labas, sveikas (informal; when speaking to a male), sveika (informal; when speaking to a female)
- Local Hawaiian Pidgin - sup braddah
- Luxembourgish - moïen (pronounced MOY-en)
- Malayalam - namaskkaram
- Maltese - merħba (meaning "welcome"), bonġu (morning), bonswa or il-lejl it-tajjeb (evening)
- Maori - kia ora
- Marathi - namaskar
-
- Nahuatl - niltze, hao
- Navajo - ya'at'eeh
- Nepali - namaskar, namaste, k cha (informal), kasto cha
- Northern German - moin moin
- Northern Shoto - dumelang
- Norwegian - hei ("hi"), hallo ("hello"), heisann ("hi there"), halloisen (very informal).
- Oshikwanyama - wa uhala po, meme? (to a female; response is ee), wa uhala po, tate? (to a male; response is ee) nawa tuu? (response is ee; formal)
- Persian - salaam or do-rood (see note above - salaam is an abbreviation, the full version being as-salaam-o-aleykum in all Islamic societies)
- Polish - dzień dobry (formal), witaj (hello) cześć (hi)
- Portuguese - oi, boas, olá or alô (informal), bom dia (good morning), boa tarde (good afternoon), boa noite (good evening).
- Rajasthani (Marwari)- Ram Ram
- Romanian - salut, buna dimineata (formal; morning) buna ziua (formal; daytime) buna searaformal; evening)
- Russian - pree-vyet (informal), zdravstvuyte (formal; pronounced ZDRA-stvooy-tyeh)
- Samoan - talofa (formal), malo (informal)
- Scanian - haja (universal), hallå (informal), go'da (formal), go'maren (morning), go'aften (evening)
-
- Serbian - zdravo (informal), dobro jutro (morning, pronounced dobro yutro), dobar dan (afternoon)
- Sinhala - a`yubowan (pronounced ar-yu-bo-wan; meaning "long live")
- Slovak - dobrý deň (formal), ahoj (pronounced ahoy), čau (pronounced chow) and dobrý (informal abbreviation)
- Slovenian — živjo (informal; pronounced zhivyo), dobro jutro (morning), dober dan (afternoon), dober večer (evening; pronounced doh-bear vetch-air)
- South African English - hoezit (pronounced howzit; informal)
- Spanish - holà (pronounced with a silent 'h': o-la), alo, que pasa (
- Swahili - jambo
- Swedish - hej (informal; pronounced hey), god dag (formal)
- Swiss German - grüzi (pronounced grew-tsi)
- Tagalog (Pilipino -
- Tahitian - ia orana
- Tamil - vanakkam
- Telugu - namaskaram
- Telugu - baagunnara (means "how are you?"; formal)
- Tetum (
- Thai - sawa dee-ka (said by a female), sawa dee-krap (said by a male)
- Tongan - malo e leilei
- Tsonga (
- 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 (
- Yiddish - sholem aleikhem (literally "may peace be unto you")
-Zulu - sawubona


Goyo blog boljee ushuu zunduu saihan yum bicheerei
ReplyDeleteaaya hudaldaa uildverleliin deed surguuliin 3-r kursiin bandi bna shdee.
ReplyDelete