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

(bbc.com)

77 points | by 1659447091 7 hours ago

14 comments

  • istjohn 4 hours ago
    > Greek, meanwhile, uses "Γειά σου" (pronounced "yah-soo") as a typical informal greeting, offering a wish for health rather than a simple salutation.

    Ironically, the root of "salutation" in latin is "salutare," to wish good health.

    > According to linguists, elongated variations such as "heyyy" could be construed as flirtatious, "hellaw" might suggest you're from the southern US, "howdy" from western US, and the clipped "hi" may indicate a curt disposition.

    Surely "howdy" derives from "how do you do?" and not "hello."

    • thaumasiotes 1 hour ago
      > Ironically, the root of "salutation" in latin is "salutare," to wish good health.

      This is an incomplete description. There is a Latin verb salvere, meaning "to be in good health".

      The Latin word "hello" is salve, the direct imperative form of salvere. It is a command, not strictly a wish, to be well. It's essentially the exact equivalent of the English expression "farewell". (Except that it means "hello" rather than "goodbye".) And like "farewell", it is understood in the derived meaning, "hello", not in the literal meaning.

      You could understand salvtare as meaning "to health someone" (it is technically derived from salvs "health", and not from salvere "to be healthy"), but you could also understand it as meaning "to say 'salve(te)'". It's relevant here that valere also means "to be healthy", and its imperative form vale means "goodbye", but salvtare is never going to refer to saying vale.

      Lewis and Short doesn't distinguish the senses "wish health" and "greet"; salvtare does have a more direct health-related sense, but it is "to keep something safe" rather than "to wish something safety".

      https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext...

      That entry also notes that the sense "keep safe" of salvtare derives from sense I.A. of salvs, '"being safe and sound, health, welfare, safety" in general', while the sense "wish health, greet, salute" derives from sense I.B., '"a wish for one's welfare, a greeting, salutation" in particular'.

      (Tangentially, I was charmed by the second citation for salvs I.B.: Non ego svm salvtis dignvs? "Am I not worthy of a hello?")

    • cwmoore 2 hours ago
      allo
  • romanhn 1 hour ago
    I wonder how many non-English speaking countries adopted hello as the default phone greeting. In Russian "allo" is used, which is pretty clearly traced to Edison's hello.

    On the other hand, my US-born teenage kids don't seem to be continuing this grand tradition, presumably due to most peer communication happening over text. When called, they just pick up the phone and wait for the caller to speak first. If I stay silent as well, I get an annoyed "yes?" eventually. My lessons in phone etiquette have gone unheeded.

    • bckr 31 minutes ago
      > and wait for the caller to speak first

      You know why this is, right? Most phone calls these days are spam or otherwise annoyances. Many are literally just seeing if a person picks up. They’re listening to see if you’re a real human being.

      The phone system is FUBAR.

      • romanhn 28 minutes ago
        I agree with the general point, and I myself don't pick up any unknown numbers. But - the kids definitely know when a parent calls, so don't think the spam thing applies here.
  • Daub 5 hours 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.

    • bloppe 1 hour ago
      These are called translingual words. 2 interesting ones are coffee and chocolate. basically no matter where you are in the world, people will understand those (with slight regional differences like "cafe", similar to hello)
  • ivanhoe 23 minutes ago
    I'm confused that, speaking of origins, they don't mention at all Spanish "hola", having literally the same meaning as hello?
  • chromatin 2 hours ago
    > According to linguists, elongated variations such as "heyyy" could be construed as flirtatious, "hellaw" might suggest you're from the southern US,

    I am from the Southern US and I am definitely not familiar with this phonetic form. Could be what a BBC writer _imagines_ a Southerner sounds like

    • hansvm 2 hours ago
      IPA makes these conversations less ambiguous. The point is that parts of the South are more likely to use an "ah" sound rather than an "oh" sound in certain places. The BBC's example (supposing it's in good faith) is lacking because it drops the second half of the dipthong following that morphed vowel.

      Attempting to write out something close to what I'm imagining they're trying to get across in plain English:

      hell-ah-ooh

      It's obviously not universal across the South, but you'll rarely see it outside of the South, so "might suggest you're from..." is probably accurate.

    • aduty 2 hours ago
      Probably. They're not very cultured there.
    • krustyburger 2 hours ago
      It’s for when you’re greeting a cute animal.
  • nephihaha 7 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 6 hours ago
      On the nautical theme, Czechs say "Ahoj" (pronounced "ahoy"). Especially charming because Czechia is landlocked. I have no idea how this came about.
      • selimthegrim 5 hours ago
        I'm still shocked at Malá mořská víla too.
        • vjerancrnjak 2 hours ago
          If you remove diacritics its completely valid BCS and same meaning.
    • t-3 1 hour ago
      I've only used it while working customer-facing jobs. Outside that, it's 'ey, yo, whatupdoe, wuzzappenin, but usually just the good old nod.
    • secondcoming 5 hours ago
      I use ‘alright?’ far more than ‘hello’
      • nephihaha 3 hours ago
        Exactly, there's another one. Another common one along with G'day, wassup, how ye doin?, hiya, wotcher, and all kinds of other things?
    • GordonS 7 hours ago
      Scotland?
      • nephihaha 6 hours ago
        Yes. Aye aye, fit like, chiel?
        • GordonS 5 hours ago
          Nae bad, nae bad min!

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

          • technothrasher 4 hours ago
            The first time I was in Scotland (from the US), the folks I was there to visit though it would be amusing to send me down to the pub below their flat to order dinner for us all. Off I went. But after accusing each other of not speaking English, I realized there was no way I was going to be able to communicate with the guy behind the bar. My friends laughed uproariously when I tucked tail and came back unsuccessful.
            • GordonS 37 minutes ago
              Funny thing is, I remember it being as bad in the other direction - first few times I went to Texas with work, almost everyone seemed to struggle to understand me, seemingly no matter how "properly" I tried to speak!
          • nephihaha 3 hours ago
            I used to live at the other end of Aberdeenshire, right out in the countryside. I never get up there now. Not even Aberdeen although I plan to visit some time. Haven't been in years.
  • detourdog 5 hours 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.
    • RestartKernel 5 hours ago
      Does it (/ did it originally) actually carry such respect from a Japanese perspective? To me, it seems like a pragmatic solution to cope with bad telephone lines more than anything.
      • detourdog 5 hours ago
        Could be, this was just my impression.
    • greggsy 5 hours ago
      Interesting. In Australia, people often use erhm or aah/aahm as an interjection to announce that they are about to commence speaking.
      • redwall_hp 38 minutes ago
        Japan has that too: あの (ano) and えっと (etto) are used as fillers to indicate that you're about to say something.

        Moshimoshi is fully a contextual greeting. (You'd use the good morning, good day, good evening equivalents in person.)

  • davidw 1 hour ago
    Ciao is an interesting one.

    Kind of like you might say 'your humble servant' in English, the Venetians would say "sciavo vostro". Literally "your slave" - schiavo vostro in modern Italian. Which then morphed into "ciao".

    • baxtr 1 hour ago
      In Bavaria and Austria they say "servus" which literally means slave/servant in Latin.
      • davidw 1 hour ago
        Yes, when they are not Grüß Gotting.
  • AstroNutt 3 hours ago
    Back in the 80's, I'd call my best friend and when his Dad would answer, he would say, "yello". Is this a North Eastern thing? His family was from Pennsylvania.
    • genter 3 hours ago
      I remember my dad saying "yello" in the 90's, here in Northern California. Pretty sure he just said it because he found it amusing.
    • Trasmatta 2 hours ago
      I've heard people in Utah say this as well
  • chistev 3 hours ago
    What's the origin of "Hello World"?
  • unnamed76ri 6 hours ago
    Interesting read. How we got the word “goodbye” is also a cool story.
  • danans 2 hours ago
    > According to linguists, elongated variations [of hello] such as "heyyy" ...

    Not to be confused with the vocative interjection "Hey" which is likely thousands of years old, at least back to Proto Indo European, but probably earlier.