63 points by 1659447091 about 6 hours ago | 30 comments | View on ycombinator
istjohn about 3 hours ago |
Daub about 4 hours ago |
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.
chromatin about 1 hour ago |
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
nephihaha about 6 hours ago |
I did once read a Christian complaining about it because it had the word "Hell" in it. A minority opinion of course.
AstroNutt about 2 hours ago |
detourdog about 4 hours ago |
danans about 1 hour ago |
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.
unnamed76ri about 5 hours ago |
chistev about 2 hours ago |
undefined about 1 hour ago |
undefined about 2 hours ago |
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."