This can not be answered. Cuneiform is a written language in pictures so it couldn't be said and "hello" would not be used.
In Babylonian cuneiform script, the equivalent phrase to "hello" would be "um-mi-du."
Hi
Cuneiform script was used to write several languages in the ancient Near East, including Sumerian, Akkadian, and Babylonian. Each language had its own set of cuneiform signs and variations in the script.
Cuneiform was used to write several languages in the ancient Near East, including Sumerian, Akkadian, Babylonian, and Assyrian. Overall, cuneiform was used to write more than a dozen languages.
Latin is a language that originated in ancient Rome and is written using the Latin alphabet, not in cuneiform, which is a system of writing used in ancient Mesopotamia. Cuneiform was used to write languages like Sumerian, Akkadian, and Babylonian, but not Latin.
Cuneiform writing was primarily used for writing in ancient Mesopotamia, encompassing languages such as Sumerian, Akkadian (including Babylonian and Assyrian dialects), Elamite, Hittite, and Urartian.
Cuneiform is a system of writing that was used in ancient Mesopotamia. It consists of a series of wedge-shaped symbols that were impressed into clay tablets using a stylus. Cuneiform was used to write various languages, including Sumerian, Akkadian, and Babylonian.
Babylonian-Assyrian cuneiform was used in writings.
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Which cuneiform are you refering to? Akkadian? Babylonian? Sumerian? Hittite? Old Persian? Ugaritic? Hittite cuneiform is kind of an anomaly because it is Indo-European language rather than Semitic.
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The Babylonians used cuneiform to write the Akkadian and Babylonian Languages. Cuneiform tablets were written by pressing reed styluses to clay blocks and then left to harden.
Yeah, go here http://www.event12.com/babylonian/index.html.
They are clay tablets that scribes wrote cuneiform on, normally to record business deals.
Babylonian used the sexadecimal system which has 60 as the base number but they also wrote the number in the cuneiform writing system wich I posted it in the related links below.
Ferris J. Stephens has written: 'Old Assyrian letters and business documents' -- subject(s): Assyro-Babylonian letters, Names, Assyro-Babylonian, Cuneiform inscriptions, Commerce
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