Since it has no permanent, native human population Antarctica does not have any languages. However, the continent is split into several territories controlled by various nations and the largest portion belongs to Australia. If we assume that this makes Australian the main Antarctican language, the word "hi" would be "hi" in Antarctica's main language.
Unless anyone knows how to say hi in Penguinish...?
It has no specified language since it's not owned by any country.
Another Answer
The language used in every scientific station is the language of the nation that supports the station. The most international language is English; French is also used as a common language.
As well, 'hello' and 'goodbye' work well, since the international language of science is English. People who live and work temporarily in Antarctica are all answering scientific questions about the health of planet earth.
That depends on where you're at. There is no permanent population in Antarctica, ergo there is no 'Antarctic' language. The United States, Argentina, Finland, Uruguay, Japan, Russia, Chile, Germany, India, Australia, Brazil, Italy, France, Spain, Poland, the United Kingdom, South Korea, Pakistan, China, Romania, Peru, Czech Republic, Belarus, Belgium, South Africa, Bulgaria, New Zealand, Sweden, Norway, and Ukraine all have research stations in Antarctica, and their respective languages would be spoken at those stations.
well there is not actually a nation there it is just a bunch of people from different places and some tourists so that is the answer
Antarctica has no native language. People greet each other using the language of the country sponsoring the scientific station.
In English, you'd say 'Good Morning'. On research stations funded by non-English speaking governments, you'd say good morning in the native language.
Depending on the language of the research station where you are working, you might say 'good afternoon' or the equivalent in the language spoken on the station.
R
hello
the size of western antarctica ye know hello friends
Say Hello to Rosita!
halito is how you say hello and how to say hello how are you is Halito, Chim Achukma?
This is how you say hello in Turkish: Merhaba = Hello
Hello what are you doing and by the way I don't know
Crocodiles do NOT say hello.
In the United States, "hello" is a common greeting used to say hi or start a conversation.
The phrase "hello all" in Hawaiian is typically translated as "aloha e nā hoa" or "aloha mai kākou."
hello hello
hello same hello
Irankarapte - Hello
In Tunisian, you can say "Marhaba" to say hello.