- Abkhaz: бзиа збаша (bziā zbāšā), мыш бзи (məš bzi), (to a man) бзиара убааит (bziārā ubāāiṭ), (to a woman) бзиара ббааит (bziārā bbāāiṭ), (to more than one person) бзиара жәбааит pl (bziārā ž°bāāiṭ)
- Afrikaans: hallo
- Ainu: イランカラㇷ゚テ (irankarapte)
- Albanian: tungjatjeta (sq)
- Alemannic German: sälü, hoi, hallo
- Aleut: aang, draas
- American Sign Language: B@Sfhead-PalmForward B@FromSfhead-PalmForward
- Amharic: ሰላም (sälam)
- Arabic: اَلسَّلَامُ عَلَيْكُمْ (ar) (as-salāmu ʿalaykum), سَلَام (salām), مَرْحَبًا (ar) (marḥaban), أَهْلًا (ʾahlan)
- Archi: салам алейкум (salam alejkum), варчӀами (warčʼami)
- Armenian: բարև (barew), ողջույն (hy) (ołǰuyn)
- Asturian: hola (ast)
- Azeri: salam (az), səlam
- Bashkir: сәләм (säläm)
- Basque: kaixo (eu)
- Bats:
- Bavarian: servus, grias di
- Belarusian: прыве́т (pryvjét), здаро́ў (zdaróŭ) (colloquial), до́бры дзень (dóbry dzjenʹ)
- Bengali: নমস্কার (bn) (nômôskar), আসসালামুআলাইকুম (assalamualaikum), সালাম (salam)
- Bulgarian: здра́сти (bg) (zdrásti) (familiar), здраве́й (bg) sg (zdravéj) (familiar), здраве́йте (bg) pl (zdravéjte) (formal)
- Burmese: မင်္ဂလာပါ (my) (mangga.lapa)
- Catalan: hola (ca)
- Central Atlas Tamazight: ⴰⵣⵓⵍ (azul)
- Chamorro: håfa adai
- Chechen: маршалла ду хьоьга (maršalla du ḥöga) (to one person), маршалла ду шуьга (maršalla du šüga) (to a group of people), ассаламу ӏалайкум (assalamu ʿalajkum), салам (salam)
- Cherokee: ᎣᏏᏲ (chr) (osiyo)
- Chichewa: moni
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 你好 (nei5 hou2), 哈佬 (haa1 lou2)
- Dungan: ни хо (ni ho)
- Hakka: 你好 (ngì-hó)
- Mandarin: 你好 (zh) (nǐhǎo), 您好 (zh) (nínhǎo) (formal), 你們好, 你们好 (nǐmen hǎo) (to a group of people), 好 (zh) (hǎo) (following an address form or name), 嗨 (zh) (hāi), 哈囉 (zh), 哈啰 (zh) (hāluó)
- Min Nan: 你好 (lí hó)
- Wu: 儂好, 侬好 (non hau)
- Choctaw: halito
- Czech: ahoj (cs), nazdar (cs) (informal), dobrý den (formal)
- Danish: hej (da), dav (da), god dag (formal), hallo (da)
- Dutch: hallo (nl), hoi (nl), dag (nl) (informal), goede dag (formal)
- Esperanto: saluton (eo)
- Estonian: tere (et), hei
- Faroese: hey, halló
- Fijian: bula (fj)
- Finnish: terve (fi), moi (fi), hei (fi), moikka (fi)
- French: salut (fr) (informal), bonjour (fr)
- Friulian: mandi
- Galician: ola (gl)
- Georgian: გამარჯობა (ka) (gamarǯoba), სალამი (salami)
- German: hallo (de), guten Tag (de), servus (de), grüß Gott (de)
- Alemannic German: grüezi
- Gilbertese: mauri
- Greek: γεια (el) (geia), γεια σου sg (geia sou), γεια σας pl (geia sas), χαίρετε (el) (chaírete)
- Ancient: χαῖρε (khaîre), χαῖρε καί ὑγίαινε (khaîre kaí hugíaine)
- Green Hmong: nyob zoo
- Greenlandic: aluu (kl)
- Gujarati: નમસ્તે (namaste), નમસ્કાર (namaskār)
- Haitian Creole: bonjou
- Hausa: sannu
- Hawaiian: aloha
- Hebrew: שָׁלוֹם (he) (shalóm), שָלוֹם עָלֶיכֶם (shalóm aléikhem)
- Hindi: नमस्ते (hi) (namaste), नमस्कार (hi) (namaskār), सलाम (hi) (salām) (used by Muslims), सत श्री अकाल (sat śrī akāl) (Sikh, hello/goodbye), हेलो (hi) (helo), हलो (halo), सत्य (hi) (satya)
- Hungarian: szia (hu), sziasztok (hu) pl (informal); szervusz (hu), szervusztok pl (formal), heló (hu)
- Icelandic: halló (is), hæ (is), góðan dag (is), góðan daginn (is)
- Ido: hola (io)
- Igbo: kèdu
- Inari Sami: tiervâ
- Indonesian: hai (id), salam (id)
- Interlingua: bon die, salute
- Irish: Dia dhuit (formal), Dia is Muire dhuit (formal, response), haileo (esp. on the phone), hóra (hi!)[1], haigh (hi!)[2], hóigh (hi/hello!)[3], (in the following phrases sibh instead of tú is used when addressing a group) Conas atá tú? (Munster, literally ‘How are you?’)[4], Cén chaoi a bhfuil tú? (Connacht, literally ‘What's the way you are?’)[4], Cad é mar atá tú? (Ulster, literally ‘What's it like being you?’)[4]
- Isan:
- Italian: ciao (it), salve (it), buongiorno (it), saluti (it) m pl
- Iu Mien: yiem longx nyei
- Japanese: おはよう (ja) (ohayō) (morning), こんにちは (ja) (konnichi wa) (daytime), こんばんは (ja) (konban wa) (evening)
- Kabardian: уузыншэм (wwzənšăm)
- Kabyle: azul
- Kalmyk: мендвт (mendvt), менд (mend) (informal)
- Kannada: ತುಳಿಲು (kn) (tuḷilu), ನಮಸ್ಕಾರ (kn) (namaskāra)
- Karachay-Balkar: кюнюгюз ашхы болсун (künügüz aşhı bolsun!), ассаламу алейкум (assalamu aleykum)
- Karelian: terveh, hei
- Kazakh: сәлем (kk) (sälem), салам (salam), сәлеметсіздер (sälemetsizder) (formal)
- Khmer: ជំរាបសួរ (cumriep suǝ), សួស្តី (suəsdəy)
- Khün:
- Korean: 안녕하십니까 (annyeonghasimnikka) (formal) 안녕하세요 (ko) (annyeonghaseyo) (neutrally formal), 안녕 (ko) (annyeong) (informal), 반갑수다 (ban-gapsuda) (Jeju)
- Krio: kusheh
- Kurdish:
- Roman: selam (ku)
- Kyrgyz: саламатсыздарбы (salamatsızdarbı), салам (ky) (salam)
- Lak: салам (salam)
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- Lao: ສະບາຍດີ (sa bāi dī)
- Latin: salve, salvete pl, ave (la) , avete pl
- Latvian: sveiki (informal to more than one person or people of indeterminate gender), sveiks (lv) (to a man), sveika (to a woman), čau (lv) (informal)
- Laz: გეგაჯგინას (gegaǯginas)
- Lezgi: салам (salam)
- Lithuanian: labas (lt), sveikas (lt) (informal), sveiki (lt) (formal)
- Livonian: tēriņtš
- Lojban: coi (jbo)
- Luo: msawa
- Lü: ᦍᦲᧃᦡᦲ (yiinḋii)
- Macedonian: здра́во (zdrávo)
- Malagasy: manao ahoana (mg)?, salama (mg) (Tsimihety)
- Malay: helo (ms), apa khabar, salam
- Malayalam: ഹലോ (halō), നമസ്തേ (ml) (namastē), നമസ്ക്കാരം (namaskkāraṃ)
- Maltese: bonġu (mt) (before 12:00 p.m.), bonswa (after 12:00 p.m.)
- Maori: kia ora (informal), tēnā koe (formal to one person), tēnā kōrua (formal to two people), tēnā koutou (formal to three or more people)
- Mapudungun: mari mari
- Marathi: नमस्कार (namaskār)
- Michif: Tánishi, boñjour
- Mingrelian: გომორძგუა (gomorʒgua)
- Mohawk: sekoh
- Mongolian: сайн уу? (mn) (sajn uu?) (informal), сайн байна уу? (mn) (sajn bajna uu?)
- Mopan Maya: d'yoos
- Nahuatl: niltze (nah), panoltih
- Navajo: yáʼátʼééh
- Neapolitan: uè
- Nepali: नमस्ते (ne) (namaste), नमस्कार (ne) (namaskāra)
- Norman: baon-n-jour (Guernsey), banjour (Guernsey), boujouo (continental Normandy), bouônjour (Jersey), bwõju (Sark)
- Northern Sami: dearvva, bures
- Northern Thai:
- Norwegian: hallo (no), hei (no), god dag (formal), halla (no) (informal), heisann
- Ojibwe: boozhoo
- Oriya: ନମସ୍କାର (or) (namaskār)
- Ossetian: салам (salam), байрай (bajraj), арфӕ (arfæ)
- Palauan: alii
- Persian: سلام (fa) (salâm); religious: سلام علیکم (salâmo aleykom); literary: درود (fa) (dorud); morning: صبح بخیر (sobh bekheyr), afternoon: ظهر بخیر (zohr bekheyr), evening: عصر بخیر (fa) (asr bekheyr)
- Pitcairn-Norfolk: watawieh
- Polish: cześć (pl) (informal), witaj, witajcie, witam (more formal), dzień dobry (pl) (formal), siema (pl) (informal), halo (pl) (on phone)
- Portuguese: oi (pt), olá (pt), (slang) e aí? (pt)
- Punjabi: ਸਤਿ ਸ਼੍ਰੀ ਅਕਾਲ (sati śrī akāl)
- Romanian: salut (ro), bună (ro), noroc (ro) (informal), bună ziua (formal), servus (ro)
- Russian: приве́т (ru) (privét) (informal), здоро́во (ru) (zdoróvo) (colloquial), здра́вствуйте (ru) (zdrávstvujte) (formal, first "в" is silent), до́брый день (ru) (dóbryj denʹ), здра́вствуй (ru) (zdrávstvuj) (informal, first "в" is silent), салю́т (ru) (saljút)
- Samoan: talofa
- Sanskrit: नमस्कार (sa) (namaskāra), नमस्ते (namaste), नमो नमः (namo namaḥ) (formal)
- Scottish Gaelic: halò (informal), latha math (formal), (informal) hòigh
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: здраво, ћао, мерхаба, селам, бог, бок
- Roman: zdravo (sh), ćao (sh), merhaba, selam (sh), bog, bok (sh)
- Shan:
- Sicilian: ciao, salutamu
- Sinhalese: හලෝ (halō), ආයුබෝවන් (si) (āyubōvan)
- Skolt Sami: tiõrv
- Slovak: ahoj (sk), servus (sk) (informal), dobrý deň (formal)
- Slovene: žívjo, zdrávo (informal); dóber dán, pozdravljeni (formal)
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: dobry źeń
- Sotho: dumela (st)
- Spanish: hola (es), buenos días (es), qué tal
- Svan: ხოჩა ლადა̈ღ (xoča ladäɣ)
- Swahili: jambo (sw), salaam
- Swedish: hallå (sv), hej (sv), god dag (sv) (formal), tjena (sv), hejsan (sv) (informal), tja (sv)
- Tagalog: kamusta (tl), kumusta (tl), hoy (tl)
- Tajik: салом (salom)
- Tamil: வணக்கம் (ta) (vaṇakkam)
- Tangsa: äshazhoix
- Tatar: сәлам (tt) (sälam)
- Telugu: నమసకారం (namasakāraṃ), బాగున్నారా (bāgunnārā)
- Thai: สวัสดี (th) (sà-wàt dii), สวัสดีครับ (sà-wàt-dii kráp) (male speaker), สวัสดีค่ะ (sà-wàt-dii kâ) (female speaker), หวัดดี (wàt-dii)
- Tibetan: བཀྲ་ཤིས་བདེ་ལེགས (bkra shis bde legs)
- Tigrinya: ሰላም (sälam)
- Tongan: mālō e lelei
- Tswana: dumela (singular, as in dumela, rra, "hello sir"), dumelang (plural, as in dumelang, borra, "hello gentlemen")
- Turkish: merhaba (tr), selam (tr)
- Turkmen: salam
- Tuvan: экии (äkïï)
- Ukrainian: приві́т (uk) (pryvít) (informal), до́брий день (dóbryj denʹ) (formal)
- Urdu: سلام (salām), نمستے (namasté), نمسکار (namaskār)
- Uyghur: سالام (salam)
- Uzbek: salom (uz)
- Venetian: ciao
- Vietnamese: xin chào, chào (vi) (ông (vi), bà (vi), cô (vi), anh (vi), chị (vi), em (vi), quí vị — depending on gender and relative social status of person addressed)
- Volapük: glidis
- Walloon: bondjoû (wa), a (wa), diewåde (wa) (old)
- Welsh: helo (cy), bore da (good morning), dydd da (good day), hylo
- West Frisian: hallo, hoi
- White Hmong: nyob zoo
- Xhosa: molo sg, molweni pl
- Yakut: эҕэрдэ (eğerde), дорообо (doroobo) (informal)
- Yiddish: שלום־עליכם (sholem-aleykhem), גוט־מאָרגן (yi) (gut-morgn)
- Zapotec: padiull
- Zazaki: sılam, namaste
- Zhuang:
- Zulu: sawubona (zu), sanibonani pl
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