Travel say hello different languages

Wherever you go in the world it is likely a greeting will often to be the first thing you hear or say when you meet new people. ‘Hello’ should be the first word you learn in any foreign language, even before please, thank you and goodbye.

Learning a language can be challenging, especially for native English speakers when other languages can seem so different. But learning to even if just a few basic words and phrases like ‘hi’ can really open up a world of opportunities and make the whole experience of interacting, travelling and meeting new people more fun and rewarding.

Starting a conversation with someone and speaking in their language is not only polite, it shows you are really making an effort to communicate. Even if at first your pronunciation isn’t perfect, when foreign people hear you trying to make an effort they will really appreciate the gesture.

Do don’t be nervous and view our list of how to say ‘hello’ in 100+ of the most spoken languages in the world below, in alphabetical order by language name below. We have also included in brackets the pronunciation for some languages which without this, it might be impossible to guess correctly.

  1. Afrikaans: Hallo
  2. Albanian: Mirë dita
  3. Amharic: ታዲያስ (Tadiyas)
  4. Arabic: مرحبا (Marhaban or Marhabaa)
  5. Armenian: Barev dzez (bah-rev dez)
  6. Azerbaijani: Салам / سلام (salam)
  7. Basque: Kaixo
  8. Bengali: নমস্কার (Nomoshkaar or Namaskar)
  9. Bhojpuri: Prannam
  10. Bosnian: Zdravo
  11. Brazilian Portugese: Olá (Hi is Oi)
  12. Breton: Demat
  13. Bulgarian: Здравейте (Zdravey)
  14. Burmese: mingalarba (min-ga-la-ba) — hello
  15. Cambodian: Sous-dey
  16. Cantonese Chinese: néih hóu (nee how)
  17. Catalan: Hola
  18. Chamorro: Hafa adai
  19. Chichewa: Moni
  20. Corsican: Bonghjornu
  21. Croatian: Bok
  22. Czech: Ahoj
  23. Danish: Hej
  24. Dutch: Hallo
  25. English: Hello
  26. Espetanto: Saluton
  27. Estonian: Tere
  28. Farsi: سلام or درود بر تو or درود بر شما (Salaam or Dorood bar to or Dorood bar shoma)
  29. Fijian: Bula
  30. Filipino: Kamusta
  31. Finnish: Hei or Terve
  32. French: Bonjour
  33. Gaelic: Halò
  34. Georgian: მიესალმები (miesalmebi)
  35. German: Hallo
  36. Greek: Χαίρε (chai-ray) or Γεια σου (yiassoo)
  37. Gujarati: Namaste
  38. Hausa: Hello
  39. Hawaiian: Aloha
  40. Hebrew: שלום (Shalom)
  41. Hindi: नमस्ते (Namaste)
  42. Hungarian: Sziasztok
  43. Igbo: Kedu
  44. Indonesian: Halo or Hai
  45. Irish: Dia dhuit
  46. Italian: Ciao
  47. Japanese: こんにちは (Kon’nichiwa)
  48. Kannada: ನಮಸ್ಕಾರ (Namaskār)
  49. Khmer: ជំរាបសួរ (Cham reap sour)
  50. Korean: 안녕 (Annyeong)
  51. Lao: ສະບາຍດີ (sabaidi)
  52. Latin: Salve
  53. Latvian: Sveiki
  54. Limburgish: Hallau
  55. Lithuanian: Sveiki
  56. Macedonian: Добар ден (Dobar den)
  57. Maithili: Prannam
  58. Malaysian: Selamat tengahari
  59. Maltese: Ħelow
  60. Mandarin Chinese: 你好 (Nǐ hǎo)
  61. Maori: Kia ora
  62. Marathi: Hĕlō, namaskār
  63. Minnan hua: Lı́ hó
  64. Nepali: नमस्ते (Namaste)
  65. Norwegian: Hei
  66. Odia: ନମସ୍କାର (Namaskār)
  67. Oromo: Akkam
  68. Oriya: Namaskar
  69. Pashto: سلام (salam)
  70. Polish: Cześć or Hej
  71. Portugese: Olá
  72. Romanian: Buna
  73. Russian: Привет (Preevyet)
  74. Samoan: Talofa
  75. Scottish Gaelic: Haló
  76. Serbian: Здраво (Zdravo)
  77. Shanghainese: 侬好 (Noŋ hɔ)
  78. Shona: Mhoro
  79. Sindhi: Assalam o alaikum
  80. Slovak: Ahoj
  81. Slovenian: Zdravo
  82. Spanish: Hola
  83. Sundanese: Sampurasun
  84. Swabian: Grüss Gott
  85. Swahili: Hodi
  86. Swedish: Hej or Hallá
  87. Tamil: வனக்கம் (Vanakkam)
  88. Vietnamese: Xin chào (Krekt)
  89. Woiworung: Womenjeka
  90. Yiddish: שלום (Sholem)
  91. Tagalog: Kamusta
  92. Tamil: வணக்கம் (Vanakaam)
  93. Telugu: నమస్కారం (Namaskāram)
  94. Thai: (Female) สวัสดีค่ะ (Sawatdeekha) / (Male): สวัสดีครับ (Sawatdeekhrap)
  95. Turkish: Merhaba
  96. Uzbek: Salom
  97. Vietnamese: Chào bạn
  98. Welsh: Helo
  99. Yiddish: העלא (Hela)
  100. Yoruba: E nle o
  101. Zulu: Sawubona

‘Hello’ really is likely to be the first word you hear or say when abroad. Say it next time to someone in their native language, see their reaction and then get the urge to start learning more.

“Speak a new language so that the world will be a new world.” – Rumi