Tschau is a the germanised form of the Italian ciao and means bye
tschüss (informal) Tschau! Auf Wiedersehen (formal)
"Hi!" in English is Sali! or Salut! in French, Hallo! or Tschau! in German, Ciao! in Italian and Allegra! in Romansh.
But isn't a German word.
Plick is not a German word.
greave is not a German word.
Rouse is not a German word
"houpacker" means nothing in German; it is not a German word.
Depends how formal you want to be.Goodbye = Auf Wiedersehen, or literally, Until we meet again.Bye = Tschüss or Tschau (Ciao)
That word is not German, sorry.
Oxded is not a German word
depends where you are in Switzerland... in some parts they speak English, some Italian, but mostly German... therefore... Goutentaag!!Gruetzi!Answer #2Well, in fact English is no official Swiss language... but of course you could say hello or hi (they know what you mean by that). Otherwise... depends in which part of the country you are... German: hallo (swissgerman: halo, sali, tschau)french: salut (giving swissgerman sali)Italian: ciao (giving swissgerman tschau)rumantsch: allegra
Do you mean elan? Then the word exists in German