in Russian language
Hello - privet, goodbye - do svidaniya... go here http://www.single-serving.com/Russian/TB/basics.php
Bonjour is Hello in English so it is the most common greeting in French!FACT: if you didnt know bonjour does actually mean good day: Bon means good -Jour means day. Put them together and it says Hello!Bonjour is "hello" in French. It the greeting most people hear if they are in France.
There are a few ways to say hello in Russian. Thank you is easier. "Spa-CEE-ba". For someone you know well, you can greet them with "zdrasty", but for most people you'd say the whole word, "zdrast-voo-tye". On the phone, you'd say, "Ah-lo"
There is no such language as "Siberian". Most people in Siberia speak Russian, but there are more than a dozen minority languages as well.
The most common way to say "my darling" in Gaelic would be to say "mo ghraidh".
Us darling.
Most of the people in the Siberian part of the Russian federation are RUSSIAN.
when you say the most common Russian do you mean varient of the Russian language? because I you do it's Russian because Russian is spoke both in Russia and Belarus and also in parts of Ukraine
The most common Russian surname is Ivanov.
The person(s) who has the most hello kitty things is the own company itself,SANRIO.
Here are the lyrics by Animaniacs...Yakko: There's a word in every language A word that you should know A word that means you're friendly A word used high and low. Though the way to say it varies Most everywhere you go Its meaning never changes And that word is... YW+D : ...Hello! YW+D : Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Yakko: In Germany it's "guten Tag" Which also means "good day" "Ni hao" is exactly how Hello sounds in Taipei. In Portugal it's "ola" In Arabic, "Salem" Saying "zravo" means hello In Macedonian. It's "aloha" in Hawaii They say "ya su" in Greece In Israel the word's "shalom" And that means "peace". The Italians have "buon giorno" The Viennese, "servus" When you're at the Eiffel Tower Just smile and say "salut!" YW+D : Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Yakko: In Nepal they say "namaste" In Sweden, "goddag" In Thailand, "sabai Dee roo" "Dobri den" in Prague. In the Spanish language, "hola" The Netherlands, it's "dag" In Japanese, "konnichi-WA" And "hey" in Little Rock. When you say "u hali gani" Swahili is the tongue In Russian it's "zdrahstvooyteh" Which sounds way better sung. If you're ever in Korea "Ahnyung hahsay yo!" And in some parts of Brooklyn Hello is just plain "yo!" Y+W : Hello! Dot : Hello! Y+W : Hello! Dot : Hello... Y+W : Hello! Dot : Hello?? Y+W : Hello! Dot : Hello!! YW+D : Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! Hello! YW+D : Though the way to say it varies Most everywhere you go Its meaning never changes Hello! Hello!! Hello!!! G'bye
I do. My room is pretty much covered in Hello Kitty.