answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

There are over 6,000 languages spoken on Earth today. Many of them cannot be used on WikiAnswers because their letters cannot be typed on an English keyboard. So this question would be impossble to answer. But see the Related Link for the word hello in SOME languages.

User Avatar

Wiki User

โˆ™ 16y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

โˆ™ 14y ago

Arabic; Marhaba, As salam ulaikum, Wa laikum salam (response to previous greeting)

Hebrew; Shalom

Aramaic (Syriac);Schlama

Somali; Maalim Wanaqsan

Tigrinya; Dahando W'Alka

Amharic;Tadiyaas

Maltese; Bongu

Tamazight (Berber);Azul, Salam Alik

Ancient Egyptian;Iiti em Hotep

French; Bonjour

Corsican;Bonghjornu

Walloon; Bondjou

Monegasque; Bon Giurnu

Spanish/Catalan/Galician;Hola

Portuguese; Ola

Italian;Buongiorno

Sardinian; Bonas Dies

Sicilian;Sa'benerica

Romansh; Allegra

Romanian; Noroc, Buna Dimineata

Latin; Salve

Esperanto;Saluton

German; Guten Tag

Yiddish; A Guten Tog, Shalom Aleikhem

Dutch/Flemish;Dag

Afrikaans; Goeie Dag

Frisian; Goeie

Luxembourgish;Moien

Swedish; Hej

Danish; Hej

Norwegian; Hei

Icelandic; Góðan daginn

Faeroese; Hey

Finnish; Terve

Estonian; Tere

Mordvinian;Shumbrat

Sami; Buorre Beaivi, Tierva, Tiorv

Hungarian;Szervus

Russian; Priviet, Zdrastvtie

Ukrainian;Privet

Belarusian;Privitani

Polish; Dzien Dobry

Czech; Ahoj

Slovak; Ahoj, Nazdar

Serbian; Zdravo

Croatian; Kako si

Slovene; Zivijo

Macedonian; Zdravo, Prijatno

Bulgarian;Zdravei

Latvian; Sveiki

Lithuanian;Sveikas

Breton; Demad

Gaelic (Irish);Haileo, Dia Dhuit

Gaelic (Scottish);Madainn Mhath

Welsh; Shmae

Manx; La Mie

Cornish; You, Dydh Da

Albanian;Tungjatjeta

Greek; Yasou

Armenian;Voghdzuyin, Parev

Hindi; Namaste

Urdu; Adhaber Se

Punjabi; Sat Sri Akal

Guajarati; Kem cho

Pashto; Senga Yai

Bengali; Namaskar, Ai Ji

Assamese;Namaskara

Sanskrit;Susvagatam, Namanamo

Kurdish;Rozhbash

Persian; Salaam

Tamil; Vanakham

Telugu;Namaskaaram

Sinhalese;Ayubowan

Japanese; Konnichi Wa

Ainu;Irankaratte

Korean; Anyo

Chinese; Ni Hao

Cantonese; Layho

Tibetan;Tashidelek

Vietnamese; Chao Ban

Lao; Sabai Dii

Bhutanese; Kuzu Zangpo

Burmese; Mingala Ba

Thai; Sawat Dee Krap (M), Sawat Dee Kaa (F)

Cambodian; Suksabai Jie Te

Indonesian; Apa Kabar

Malay; Selamat Datong

Javanese;Selamat

Philippino;Kumushtaka

Mongol; Sain Baina Uu

Tatar; Isenmesez

Turkish; Merhaba

Azeri; Nahardansonia Xeyir

Kazakh; Salamatsyz Ba

Uzbek;Yakhshimisiz

Uyghur; Hoy

Tajik; Salom

Kyrgyz; Selamat Sizbe

Turkmen; Salam

Abkhaz;Mshybziakua

Georgian;Gamardjobat

Chechen; Marsha Voghila

Basque; Kaixo

Guarani; Maitei

Aymara;Kamisaraki?

Quechua; Winchis, Imaynalla

Nahuatl (Aztec);Niltze

Mayan;Ki'ki't'áantabah

Lakota; Hau

Apache; Daazho, Ya'Atay

Navajo;Ya'ath'eh

Cherokee; Osiyo

Mohican; Aqui

Mohawk; Kwe

Comanche; Haa

Cheyenne; Haaahe

Chickasaw;Halito

Kickapoo; Ho

Haida; Kii-te-daas a

Inuktitut (Eskimo);Asujutilli

Greenlandic;

Swahili; Hujambo

Kikuyu; Natya, Ni Kwenga

Kikongo;Kiambote

Zulu; Sawubona

Xhosa; Molo

Hausa; Sannu

Kirundi; Bwakeye

Yoruba; O Ku Osan

Wolof; Jama Ngaam

Malagasy;Ahoanna

Maori; Kia Ora

Fijian: Bula

Tongan; Malo E Lelei

Tahitian; Ia Ora Na

Hawaiian; Aloha

Samoan/Tuvaluan;Talofa

Marshallese; Yokwe Yuk

Warlpiri (Australian Aboriginal); Calamara

Pitjantjatjara (Australian Aboriginal); Wai Palya

Yankunytjatjara; Wai

Arabic; Marhaba, As salam ulaikum, Wa laikum salam (response to previous greeting)

Hebrew; Shalom

Aramaic (Syriac);Schlama

Somali; Maalim Wanaqsan

Tigrinya; Dahando W'Alka

Amharic;Tadiyaas

Maltese; Bongu

Tamazight (Berber);Azul, Salam Alik

Ancient Egyptian;Iiti em Hotep

French; Bonjour

Corsican;Bonghjornu

Walloon; Bondjou

Monegasque; Bon Giurnu

Spanish/Catalan/Galician;Hola

Portuguese; Ola

Italian;Buongiorno

Sardinian; Bonas Dies

Sicilian;Sa'benerica

Romansh; Allegra

Romanian; Noroc, Buna Dimineata

Latin; Salve

Esperanto;Saluton

German; Guten Tag

Yiddish; A Guten Tog, Shalom Aleikhem

Dutch/Flemish;Dag

Afrikaans; Goeie Dag

Frisian; Goeie

Luxembourgish;Moien

Swedish; Hej

Danish; Hej

Norwegian; Hei

Icelandic; Góðan daginn

Faeroese; Hey

Finnish; Terve

Estonian; Tere

Mordvinian;Shumbrat

Sami; Buorre Beaivi, Tierva, Tiorv

Hungarian;Szervus

Russian; Priviet, Zdrastvtie

Ukrainian;Privet

Belarusian;Privitani

Polish; Dzien Dobry

Czech; Ahoj

Slovak; Ahoj, Nazdar

Serbian; Zdravo

Croatian; Kako si

Slovene; Zivijo

Macedonian; Zdravo, Prijatno

Bulgarian;Zdravei

Latvian; Sveiki

Lithuanian;Sveikas

Breton; Demad

Gaelic (Irish);Haileo, Dia Dhuit

Gaelic (Scottish);Madainn Mhath

Welsh; Shmae

Manx; La Mie

Cornish; You, Dydh Da

Albanian;Tungjatjeta

Greek; Yasou

Armenian;Voghdzuyin, Parev

Hindi; Namaste

Urdu; Adhaber Se

Punjabi; Sat Sri Akal

Guajarati; Kem cho

Pashto; Senga Yai

Bengali; Namaskar, Ai Ji

Assamese;Namaskara

Sanskrit;Susvagatam, Namanamo

Kurdish;Rozhbash

Persian; Salaam

Tamil; Vanakham

Telugu;Namaskaaram

Sinhalese;Ayubowan

Japanese; Konnichi Wa

Ainu;Irankaratte

Korean; Anyo

Chinese; Ni Hao

Cantonese; Layho

Tibetan;Tashidelek

Vietnamese; Chao Ban

Lao; Sabai Dii

Bhutanese; Kuzu Zangpo

Burmese; Mingala Ba

Thai; Sawat Dee Krap (M), Sawat Dee Kaa (F)

Cambodian; Suksabai Jie Te

Indonesian; Apa Kabar

Malay; Selamat Datong

Javanese;Selamat

Philippino;Kumushtaka

Mongol; Sain Baina Uu

Tatar; Isenmesez

Turkish; Merhaba

Azeri; Nahardansonia Xeyir

Kazakh; Salamatsyz Ba

Uzbek;Yakhshimisiz

Uyghur; Hoy

Tajik; Salom

Kyrgyz; Selamat Sizbe

Turkmen; Salam

Abkhaz;Mshybziakua

Georgian;Gamardjobat

Chechen; Marsha Voghila

Basque; Kaixo

Guarani; Maitei

Aymara;Kamisaraki?

Quechua; Winchis, Imaynalla

Nahuatl (Aztec);Niltze

Mayan;Ki'ki't'áantabah

Lakota; Hau

Apache; Daazho, Ya'Atay

Navajo;Ya'ath'eh

Cherokee; Osiyo

Mohican; Aqui

Mohawk; Kwe

Comanche; Haa

Cheyenne; Haaahe

Chickasaw;Halito

Kickapoo; Ho

Haida; Kii-te-daas a

Inuktitut (Eskimo);Asujutilli

Greenlandic;

Swahili; Hujambo

Kikuyu; Natya, Ni Kwenga

Kikongo;Kiambote

Zulu; Sawubona

Xhosa; Molo

Hausa; Sannu

Kirundi; Bwakeye

Yoruba; O Ku Osan

Wolof; Jama Ngaam

Malagasy;Ahoanna

Maori; Kia Ora

Fijian: Bula

Tongan; Malo E Lelei

Tahitian; Ia Ora Na

Hawaiian; Aloha

Samoan/Tuvaluan;Talofa

Marshallese; Yokwe Yuk

Warlpiri (Australian Aboriginal); Calamara

Pitjantjatjara (Australian Aboriginal); Wai Palya

Yankunytjatjara; Wai

Dutch;hallo, goedemorgen, hi

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

โˆ™ 11y ago

* Arabic - sabbah-el-khair (good morning), masaa-el-khair (good evening), Marhaba (Hello) * Armenian - barev or parev * Bahamas - hello (formal), hi or heyello (informal) * Basque - kaixo (pronounced kai-show), egun on (morning; pronounced egg-un own), gau on (night; pronounced gow own) * Bavarian and Austrian German - grüß Gott (pronounced gruess gott), servus (informal; also means "goodbye"; pronounced zair-voos) * Bengali - namaskar * Bulgarian - zdraveite, zdrasti (informal) * Burmese - mingalarbar * Catalan - hola (pronounced o-la), bon dia (pronounced bon dee-ah)good morning, bona tarda (bona tahr-dah) good afternoon, bona nit (bona neet)good night * Chamorro - hafa adai (hello/what's up?), hafa? (informal), howzzit bro/bran/prim/che'lu? (informal), sup (informal)and all other English greetings * Chichewa - moni bambo! (to a male), moni mayi! (to a female) * Chinese - Cantonese nei ho (pronounced nay ho) Mandarin (pronounced ni hao) * Congo - mambo * Croatian - boke (informal), dobro jutro (morning), dobar dan (day), dobra većer (evening), laku noć (night) * Czech - dobré ráno (until about 8 or 9 a.m.), dobrý den (formal), dobrý večer (evening), ahoj (informal; pronounced ahoy) * Danish - hej (informal; pronounced hey), god dag (formal), god aften (evening; formal), hejsa (very informal). * Dutch - hoi (very informal), hallo (informal), goedendag (formal) * English - hello (formal), hi (informal) * Esperanto - saluton * Finnish - hyvää päivää (formal), moi or hei (informal), moro (Tamperensis) * French - salut (informal; silent 't'), bonjour (formal, for daytime use; 'n' as a nasal vowel), bonsoir (good evening; 'n' is a nasal vowel), bonne nuit (good night). There is also "ça va", but this is more often used to mean "how are you?" * Gaeilge - dia duit (informal; pronounced dee-ah gwitch; literally "God be with you") * Georgian - gamardjoba * German - hallo (informal), Guten Tag (formal; pronounced gootan taag), Tag (very informal; pronounced taack). * Gujarathi - kem che * Greek - yia sou (pronounced yah-soo; informal), yia sas (formal) * Hawaiian - aloha * Hebrew - shalom (means "hello", "goodbye" and "peace"), hi (informal), ma kore? (very informal, literally means "whats happening" or "whats up") * Hindi - namaste (pronounced na-mus-thei), kaise hain (a little formal), kaise ho (more informal, familiar) * Hindustani - namaste * Hungarian, Magyar - jo napot (pronounced yoh naput; daytime; formal), szervusz (pronounced sairvoose; informal) * Icelandic - góðan dag (formal; pronounced gothan dagg), hæ (informal) * Igbo - nde-ewo (pronounced enday aywo), nna-ewo (pronounced enna wo) * Indonesian - selamat pagi (morning), selamat siang (afternoon), selamat malam (evening) * Italian - ciào (informal; also means "goodbye"), salve, buon giorno (morning; formal), buon pomeriggio (afternoon; formal), buona sera (evening; formal) * Japanese - ohayou gozaimasu (pronounced o-ha-yo go-zai-mass), konnichi wa (pronounced ko-nee-chee-wa; daytime or afternoon), konban wa (pronounced gong-ban-wa; evening); moshi moshi (pronounced moh-shee moh-shee; when answering the phone); doumo (pronounced doh-moh; informal way of greeting, but means countless other things as well so only use when context makes sense) * Kanien'kéha (Mohawk) - kwe kwe (pronounced gway gway) * Kannada - namaskara * Klingon - nuqneH? [nook-neck] (literally: "what do you want?") * Korean - ahn nyeong ha se yo (formal; pronouned ahn-yan-ha-say-yo), ahn nyeong (informal; can also be used to mean "goodbye") * Kurdish - choni, roj bahsh (day; pronounced rohzj bahsh) * Lao - sabaidee (pronounced sa-bai-dee) * Latin (Classical) - salve (pronounced sal-way; when talking to one person), salvete (pronounced sal-way-tay; when talking to more than one person) * Latvian - labdien, sveiki, chau (informal; pronounced chow). * Lingala - mbote * Lithuanian - laba diena (formal), labas, sveikas (informal; when speaking to a male), sveika (informal; when speaking to a female) * Local Hawaiian Pidgin - sup braddah * Luxembourgish - moïen (pronounced MOY-en) * Malayalam - namaskkaram * Maltese - merħba (meaning "welcome"), bonġu (morning), bonswa or il-lejl it-tajjeb (evening) * Maori - kia ora * Marathi - namaskar * Mongolia - sain baina uu? (pronounced saa-yen baya-nu; formal), sain uu? (pronounced say-noo; informal) * Nahuatl - niltze, hao * Navajo - ya'at'eeh * Nepali - namaskar, namaste, k cha (informal), kasto cha * Northern German - moin moin * Northern Shoto - dumelang * Norwegian - hei ("hi"), hallo ("hello"), heisann ("hi there"), halloisen (very informal). * Oshikwanyama - wa uhala po, meme? (to a female; response is ee), wa uhala po, tate? (to a male; response is ee) nawa tuu? (response is ee; formal) * Persian - salaam or do-rood (see note above - salaam is an abbreviation, the full version being as-salaam-o-aleykum in all Islamic societies) * Polish - dzień dobry (formal), witaj (hello) cześć (hi) * Portuguese - oi, boas, olá or alô (informal), bom dia (good morning), boa tarde (good afternoon), boa noite (good evening). * Rajasthani (Marwari)- Ram Ram * Romanian - salut, buna dimineata (formal; morning) buna ziua (formal; daytime) buna searaformal; evening) * Russian - pree-vyet (informal), zdravstvuyte (formal; pronounced ZDRA-stvooy-tyeh) * Samoan - talofa (formal), malo (informal) * Scanian - haja (universal), hallå (informal), go'da (formal), go'maren (morning), go'aften (evening) * Senegal - salamaleikum * Serbian - zdravo (informal), dobro jutro (morning, pronounced dobro yutro), dobar dan (afternoon) * Sinhala - a`yubowan (pronounced ar-yu-bo-wan; meaning "long live") * Slovak - dobrý deň (formal), ahoj (pronounced ahoy), čau (pronounced chow) and dobrý (informal abbreviation) * Slovenian - živjo (informal; pronounced zhivyo), dobro jutro (morning), dober dan (afternoon), dober večer (evening; pronounced doh-bear vetch-air) * South African English - hoezit (pronounced howzit; informal) * Spanish - holà (pronounced with a silent 'h': o-la), alo, que pasa (Spain, informal) * Swahili - jambo * Swedish - hej (informal; pronounced hey), god dag (formal) * Swiss German - grüzi (pronounced grew-tsi) * Tagalog (Pilipino - Philippines) - kumusta ka (means "how are you?") * Tahitian - ia orana * Tamil - vanakkam * Telugu - namaskaram * Telugu - baagunnara (means "how are you?"; formal) * Tetum (Timor - Leste) - bondia (morning), botarde (afternoon), bonite (evening) * Thai - sawa dee-ka (said by a female), sawa dee-krap (said by a male) * Tongan - malo e leilei * Tsonga (South Africa) - minjhani (when greeting adults), kunjhani (when greeting your peer group or your juniors) * Turkish - merhaba (formal), naber? (Informal) * Ukranian - dobriy ranuke (formal; morning), dobriy deyn (formal; afternoon), dobriy vechir (formal; evening), pryvit (informal) * Urdu - adaab * Vietnamese - xin chào * Welsh - shwmai (North Wales; pronounced shoe-my) * Yiddish - sholem aleikhem (literally "may peace be unto you") * Zulu - sawubona

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

โˆ™ 14y ago

French - Bonjour English - hello spanish - hola german - goutan taug

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

โˆ™ 11y ago

You got it right. "Hello in 150 languages."

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

โˆ™ 10y ago

How do you say Hi in singhala language

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

โˆ™ 15y ago

it depends what language do you speak?

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Anonymous

Lvl 1
โˆ™ 4y ago

Hello

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is Hello in many languages?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

How do you say hello in languages?

You got it right. "Hello in 150 languages."


How do you say hello in Sahara?

"Sahara" is not a language. It is a place where many languages are spoken.


How do you say how are you in all languages?

hello


What is the Asian word for hello?

Asian is not a language, there are many languages in Asia, like Mandarin, Indian, and many others.


How do you say hello in many different languages?

See the Related Link.you say hola bonjour


What words do all languages have in common?

Hello


What is ment by hello?

is a popular and polite greeting adapted in many different languages and places around the world.


What is hello in tribal languages?

There are many tribal languages around the world, each with their own word for "hello." Some examples include "Kwe" in the Ojibwe language, "Yรก'รกt'รฉรฉh" in Navajo, and "Sawubona" in Zulu.


What are some words we have gotten from other languages?

hello


How do you say hello in the main languages of Zimbabwe?

Shona: Mhoro Ndebele: Sawubona English: Hello


How do you say hello?

Hello in english is pronounced (hell-OH) it rhymes with fello, jello ,yellow. the most common version oh hello is "hi"or "hey". * for other languages see the questions"how do you say hello in(spanish)"it would be "hola"


How do you say hello in well known languages?

There is know language.