Not as simple a question as it first appears. Aramaic is now often used to mean a group of modern languages, the most common being Assyrian and Chaldean. Assyrian uses many forms of "hello", depending on formalities, level of politeness, regional dialect and the gender of the speaker.
Chaldean (used commonly in Iraq) is simpler - "Shlama illakh".
Things are further complicated by the language's long history which has meant it's changed a lot. Ancient Aramaic is very different from any of the modern languages which hail from it.
The Aramaic translation for "hello" is Shlama.
The translation for Jacob in Aramaic is "Ya'qub" or "Yaqub."
There is no Aramaic word for "Hello" in Aramaic. Culturally and historically, the greeting employed has been "Shlama" - Peace. This has carried over into Syriac as well as Arabic. Syriac: Shlama, Arabic: Salaam
In Aramaic, you can say "shlomo ema, maleh haymana?" to say "hello mom, how are you?"
Saber. Pronounced Saw Bear. From the same root as "think" and of "consider".
The Aramaic translation for "hello" is Shlama.
The translation for Jacob in Aramaic is "Ya'qub" or "Yaqub."
There is no Aramaic word for "Hello" in Aramaic. Culturally and historically, the greeting employed has been "Shlama" - Peace. This has carried over into Syriac as well as Arabic. Syriac: Shlama, Arabic: Salaam
In Aramaic, you can say "shlomo ema, maleh haymana?" to say "hello mom, how are you?"
The Aramaic translation of "House of prayer" is "Bet Tehillah" (ܒܝܬ ܬܢܚܐ).
Tracy is pronounced the same in Aramaic as it is in English. You can spell it טריסי in Jewish Aramaic.
Difficult to translate. Truth is B'QuOSHT'aA.
Saber. Pronounced Saw Bear. From the same root as "think" and of "consider".
Shlama, ma shlomakh?
A:No. The Septuagint was a flawed early translation of the Hebrew scriptures from Hebrew and, to a small extent, Aramaic into Greek.
Translation: Akh (אח)
In Haida, the translation for "hello" is Ḵ’áaw.