Egyptian (ancient Egypt) Iiti
Egyptian (ancient Egypt) Iiti em hotep
Egyptian (ancient Egypt)[lit. in peace] Em hotep
Egyptian (ancient Egypt)[in great peace] Em hotep nefer
Egyptian (ancient Egypt)[very great peace] Em hotep nefer weret
Egyptian (ancient Egypt)[plural] Yii em hotep
Egyptian (ancient Egypt)[informal] Yeh
Egyptian (ancient Egypt) [to a man] Aw ibek
Egyptian (ancient Egypt) [to a woman] Aw ibetj
In Egypt, the most common way to say hello is "marhaban" (مرحبًا) in Arabic.
ahlan bek(add y for female) fe masr
Hello : marhaba written : مرحبا
hello
hello
You say "hello" in English.
Say Hello to Rosita!
Kamusta is how you say hello
halito is how you say hello and how to say hello how are you is Halito, Chim Achukma?
hello
That is not entirely true, unless you want it to be obvious you are a foreigner who has no knowledge of Egyptian Arabic. The most common way to greet someone is by saying 'Iz-za-ac' (mas.) 'Iz-za-ic' (fem.) meaning how are you, but the most popular greeting in Egypt. Egypt has their own dialect so knowing standard Arabic will not be very popular to say.The most widely spoken language in Egypt is Arabic. The greeting for 'hello' in Arabic is 'Salem Ale Kum'.
This is how you say hello in Turkish: Merhaba = Hello