There are four official languages in Switzerland. German, French, Italian and Romansch. In the case of German, Standard German is only used as the written language and in communication with strangers. The spoken language is Swiss German. There is no one 'Swiss' language. You did not say which language you wanted to use. Swiss German is spoken by about two thirds of Swiss, but it also has strong regional dialects. So in Swiss German, your question would be similar to one of these forms:
Wiä gat's Inä? Wiä gat's? Wiä häsch äs?
There are 4 main languages in Switzerland:
German is spoken by about 64% -----Hallo
French by 23% ------Bonjour
Italian by 8%------Ciao
Romansh is spoken by less than 1% -----Ciao/Tgau/Allegra
to say hello is :
teja (most common)
souzinà (polite)
Answer #2Whatever this is... it's not Swiss... in Switzerland they speak either (Swiss)German, french, Italian or rumantsch...German: hallo - or Swiss(German): halo, sali, tschau
french: salut (giving the swissgerman sali)
Italian: ciao, salve (giving the swissgerman tschau)
rumantsch: allegra
There is no Swiss German official language.
I have never seen a Swiss German dictionary.
Additional comment: This is true about the language not being "official" as in you can't really write it. There are so many dialects that no one could agree on exactly how to say the same word, much less spell it. It'd be like trying to officially write in a southern accent (but West Virginian or Texan?) or New England (but Boston or Maine?) but with far greater differences. Like how do you write an entire language in Jamaican dialect? You write it in High English, so to speak, instead. Same goes with Swiss German and High German.
Swiss German dictionaries do exist but they are regional and often quite difficult to understand since it's hard to convey how to say the word with no real standardized spelling as well as sounds that don't exist in High German.
That said, hello is pretty straight forward. The formal way in most regions is "Grüetzi". In Bern, you'd say "Grüessech". These are a short, compressed form of saying something like "Greetings to you".
The first person plural is mir (instead of wir in Standard High German).
Bonjour
There is no word in the Cantonese language that means "swiss". It's like in English/Spanish. Buenos Dias mean good day but in the states we translate it to hello or good morning
Hoi means hello in Swiss German
In Swiss German, you can say "Hallo liebe FrΓΌnde."
In German, "hoi" is a casual greeting similar to saying "hi" or "hey" in English. It is commonly used among friends or peers.
Say Hello to Rosita!
halito is how you say hello and how to say hello how are you is Halito, Chim Achukma?
no problem
This is how you say hello in Turkish: Merhaba = Hello
Crocodiles do NOT say hello.
In the United States, "hello" is a common greeting used to say hi or start a conversation.
In Swiss German flowers are Blumen.
The phrase "hello all" in Hawaiian is typically translated as "aloha e nΔ hoa" or "aloha mai kΔkou."