The Surprising History of the word HELLO and its Many Meanings

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Bonjour, buongiorno, bom dia, guten tag

Buenos dias, good day, good day? good day?

nobody says that now. Unlike in some

other languages we don't usually say

GOOD DAY in English these days except

perhaps in Australia I believe. In

English we usually just say HELLO or HI

but why? why is English different to

other languages and HELLO you might only

know it as a greeting but did you know

that HELLO has many different meanings

depending on how you pronounce it? If you

are learning English you need to know

the 8 different meanings of hello. That's

right, 8 different meanings and today

we're going to explain it all so stay

tuned... oh by the way Spanish speakers why

do you say your greeting in the plural

BUENOS DIAS - "good days" when in all other

languages it's singular if you know the

answer to that then do let me know in

the comments I'd be fascinated to know the answer

Hello and welcome to LetThemTalk now

HELLO is a very important word probably

the most important word in the English

language. It's usually the first word we

use when meeting a stranger

you'll never get a second chance to make

a good FIRST impression.

now when you first encounter somebody he

or she will look at your appearance, your

body language, your eye contact and

listen to the words that first come out

of your mouth which is usually HELLO

psychologists have shown that most

people form an impression of a person

within the first few seconds of meeting

them. So, if you like it or not, that

is the reality, so you had better get it

right! But the word hello is important in

other ways too. By using the word hello

you are acknowledging another human

being. Say it nicely and you will boost

the other person's self-esteem and you

will warm their heart and make them

smile.

Don't underestimate HELLO it will leave

a lasting impression. This simple

greeting is more powerful than most

people realize so usually (I stress

usually) when you say HELLO you want to

come across as trustworthy and likeable

most of the time. But there is more in English the word HELLO can be pronounced

in different ways each with a nuance of

meaning. Now if you're learning English

you need to know these distinct HELLOS

and this is what we are going to look at

today. But first let's have a look at the

surprisingly interesting

history of the word HELLO.

So using hello as a greeting is

relatively new before the 1900s

English-speaking people used another

word to greet people. When you met

someone for the first time you would say

"How do you do?" and the response would be

"How do you do?" that's right you respond

to "How do you do?" with "How do you do?"

You knew that didn't you? you could say

"good morning" you could say "good

afternoon" you could say "good evening" or

"good day"

but before being replaced by HELLO, "good

day" was the standard way of greeting

someone the word HELLO or sometimes HULLO

was in use as far back as the 19th century but then it had a different

meaning. It was used to show surprise "oh hello! why is there a fish in my hat" or

to attract attention "hello hello over there it's me your uncle Bob". So the word

HELLO didn't mean HELLO so what happened to make the word HELLO the everyday

greeting that we use today?

So the answer is the telephone. When you pick up the telephone you say HELLO. Now

you do but at the beginning it wasn't clear nobody knew what to say with this

new technology when it was invented. Now the inventor of the telephone was

Alexander Graham Bell, at least he was the first to patent the telephone and

his company sold some of the first telephones in the 1880s so Alexander

Graham Bell recommended that you answered the phone by saying AHOY HOY

AHOY-HOY

Now AHOY. if you don't know the word, is a nautical term that you use to

greet someone on a ship or on another ship "Ahoy there you on the other ship"

So why do we say HELLO? Ah because Thomas Edison a fellow inventor and a rival

recommended using HELLO when answering the phone it was kind of logical because

it still had the meaning at the time of attracting someone's attention which is

what you wanted to do with a new piece of technology and you couldn't see the

person at the other end you wanted to know they were there so you

said HELLO, HELLO, HELLO. So anyway, by the way in an early handbook of

telephone etiquette they recommended that you end a call you end a call not

with GOODBYE but with THAT IS ALL before you hung up. So we use HELLO. HELLO has

entered the English lexicon as a greeting thanks to Thomas Edison

and although HELLO became the standard phrase Alexander

Graham Bell wasn't happy and he continued to use AHOY-HOY

when answering the phone, for the rest of his life. So gradually in the 20th

century HELLO moved from the telephone to becoming the

greeting we all used today but as I said earlier HELLO has many different

meanings if you are only using HELLO as a greeting then you are short-changing

yourself so let's have a look at the 8 different

meanings of HELLO. Ok so the first meaning well, we've already looked at

HELLO is as a greeting, "hello how are you," "hi". We've already looked at the second

meaning too to show surprise "hello! What's this? there is a giraffe in my

garden that's strange." and we've already looked at a third

meaning too to attract someone's attention "Hello, hello I'm lost in the

forest, is anybody there? "Hello Phil are you

listening to me? I was telling you this story about my uncle's prostate

examination". Now, the fourth meaning is to show suspicion "Hello,

that's strange somebody used my credit card to buy an iPhone in Vladivostok",

hello, why is the tap water brown?" Number 5 to ask if the person is

still there. Maybe you've been disconnected. "Hello,

you still there? hello, hello," 6 to make someone aware of your presence when you

can't see anyone. "Hello anybody there? hello I just arrived in the hotel it's

anybody at reception?" number 7 to show that a person is disconnected from

reality. "You're going to the interview for the job in the bank in that tie

hello!". what you gave a complete stranger on the street a £100 for that

'gold' ring? hello!" and finally number 8 to flirt with someone someone you just

met and someone you find very attractive. "Hello hello what's your name?" "Hello would

you like to join me on the couch?" "Hello would you like to go for a ride on my

yacht?" And a little footnote before I go Alexander Graham Bell refused to have a

telephone in his study because he didn't like interruptions and that was in the

1880s and maybe in this day in the age of smartphones and omnipresent technology

we can learn something from him today. so there you are so now go out and

try those different uses of HELLO especially the one about flirting and

let me know in the comments how it goes... ...did I tell you that my new invention it's

called the toothpick and it's very good for removing bits of food from between

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one extra toothpick absolutely free! how can you resist

That is all.