In Indian culture, you can say "Namaste mere saathhii saathhii vishaalaa shrenii ke" to greet your fellow classmates.
You say "hello" in English.
In Filipino, you say "hello" as "kamusta."
The language of India is not Indian, it is Hindi. To say hello, you would say "namaste", to be simple. Do take note that India has many states, so the languages they speak may vary. Majority of the East Indian people who live near me are from India's state of Gujarat, so instead of "namaste", I was told to say "Jai Shri Krishna". Well, I used to just say "Good morning/afternoon" to my friend's dad until he told me "To greet, say jai shri Krishna". It has some religious significance to them, so that's what I say from now on.
In Paiute, you can say "Kwai" to say hello.
In Neapolitan, you say "ciao" to say hello.
Greetings, fellow.
'Tong xue men hao' (同学们好) literally means "People who learn with you, hello". But teachers can say it to their students as "Hello, students." As well as students can say it to their classmates as "Hello, classmates."
Chikma!
sikilik
This would be quite hard to translate. I think the closest would be 同級生たち (doukyuuseitachi) which means something along the lines of 'my classmates'. Example: 同級生たち、こんにちは (doukyuuseitachi, konnichiwa) - "Hello, my fellow students."
A:Shema e' tewa or Kastkan e Yewa
Hello is OKI in Blackfoot. My name is is NII TA NIK KO.
if you are not a muslim or indian or pakistican or whatever kind of people who speak urdu, you just say hello if you are one of those people you say 'uslawmoohlehkum' say sulam for short
Aslam'ualaiykum is to say Hello in Pakistan Punjab Sat Shri Akal..... is used in Indian Punjab But usually pronounce as Sa'Sri'Akal....
You say "hello" in English.
Say Hello to Rosita!
halito is how you say hello and how to say hello how are you is Halito, Chim Achukma?