Assamese = নমস্কাৰ (nomoskaar)
Bengali = নমস্কার (nômoshkar) (muslims say আসসালামু আলাইকুম (assalamualaikum))
Bhojpuri = प्रणाम (prannam)
English = hello
Hindi = नमस्ते (namaste)
Kannada = ನಮಸ್ತೆ (namaste)
Malayalam = നമസ്തെ (namaste)
Nepali = नमस्ते (namaste)
Oriya = ନମସ୍ତେ (namaste)
Punjabi = ਨਮਸਕਾਰ / نمسکار (namaskar)
Sinhala = ආයුඛෝවන් (āyubūvan)
Tamil = வணக்கம் (vaṇakkam)
Telugu = ఏమండీ (aemaṅdee)
Urdu = (āssālam 'alaykum) السلام علیکم
NAMASTE
In India, you can say "Namaste" or "Namaskar" to greet someone in the afternoon.
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.
customary greetings of india means ? ANS:When we meet some one we greet them like in all religious unique styles are there to greet people like example :- Muslims say" Salam" and Hindus say "Namaste ".
In Nepali, you can say "Namaste" to greet someone.
There are about 450 Languages spoken in India and about 700 different Native American languages. But there is no such language as "Indian".
Hello is said as hello, as India is a diverse country with many languages they have different words denoting hello. Otherwise it's the universal hello.In marathi you call it namaskar In Hindi its namaste prnouced- NAM- EST- TAYYY say hello in Tamil as "vanakkam"
There is no particular equivalent word in the same sense in Hindi for good afternoon as most Indian languages don't use greetings which change according to the time of day. You can use common greeting Namaste or namaskaar at any time of the day.
There are about 450 Languages spoken in India and about 700 different Native American languages. But there is no such language as "Indian".
Namaste
namaste
no its not