The 600-year-old origins of the word 'hello'

(bbc.com)

21 points | by 1659447091 2 hours ago

4 comments

  • detourdog 4 minutes ago
    The article should have mentioned the Japanese phone greeting of Moshi Moshi. Which I think means I’m going to speak now. Which I think has a wonderful respect for stillness or quiet.
  • Daub 22 minutes ago
    One advantage of using hello as a greeting is that it is agnostic of social rank. This made it the perfect choice for greeting people of unknown social rank on the phone.

    Having traveled the world quite a bit I can attest to the ubiquity of the word hello… almost everywhere I go it is understood. ‘OK’ has a similar ubiquity, and it is interesting that both words are relatively new additions to the English (universal?) language.

  • nephihaha 1 hour ago
    It feels as if "hello" is fading out again. It was never completely universal. Where I grew up, people still say "aye aye" (not on a ship btw), along with the usual "good whatever".

    I did once read a Christian complaining about it because it had the word "Hell" in it. A minority opinion of course.

    • HPsquared 31 minutes ago
      On the nautical theme, Czechs say "Ahoj" (pronounced "ahoy"). Especially charming because Czechia is landlocked. I have no idea how this came about.
    • GordonS 1 hour ago
      Scotland?
      • nephihaha 1 hour ago
        Yes. Aye aye, fit like, chiel?
        • GordonS 10 minutes ago
          Nae bad, nae bad min!

          So, not just Scotland but North East Scotland? (I'm in the shire myself, previously Aberdeen)

  • unnamed76ri 52 minutes ago
    Interesting read. How we got the word “goodbye” is also a cool story.