8 comments

  • Daub 25 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.

  • detourdog 8 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.

  • nephihaha 2 hours 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 34 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 2 hours ago

      Scotland?

        nephihaha an hour ago

        Yes. Aye aye, fit like, chiel?

          GordonS 13 minutes ago

          Nae bad, nae bad min!

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

  • unnamed76ri an hour ago

    Interesting read. How we got the word “goodbye” is also a cool story.