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RheinControl
9th Aug 2005, 18:53
Hi folks,

I know such a thread already exists, but it's more than 4 years old and contains thousands of errors.
I'd like to collect the ways to say hello and good-bye in the common languages. As I want a good quality here, please be a native speaker of the language you post.


All I know for sure is German:

hello: Hallo

good morning: Guten Morgen

(between noon and evening): Guten Tag

good evening: Guten Abend

bye: Tschüss (sounds like the English 'cheers', just drop the 'r' - very common)
or: Auf Wiederhören (very formal)
or: Tschau (sounds like the Italian 'ciao')

thank you: Danke
or: Vielen Dank


In Bavaria and Austria (in addition to the above mentionned words):

hello: Servus
or Grüss Gott

bye: Servus

Jerricho
9th Aug 2005, 18:57
Australian:

Hello - "G'day"

Goodbye - "G'day"

;)

Richard Taylor
9th Aug 2005, 18:57
As a native Aberdonian,I'd like to say...

FIT LIKE,MIN ?

Translated to: "How are you,my man"?

Mr R Sole
9th Aug 2005, 19:44
Continuing on the Aberdeen theme, I called up Milan Control whilst en route to Malpensa one day with:

'Milan - Fit like a day'!

chiglet
9th Aug 2005, 20:21
Goodbye in Malteese is Sah-ha.....
Heard a tale of a "Large Airport near London" who said Goodbye in French, German, Dutch etc.... except he never said it to the Nationality concerned :ok:
watp,iktch

AlanM
9th Aug 2005, 20:59
Or the Irish "Good luuck"

(Try and avoid saying "bye bye you fecker"!)

niknak
9th Aug 2005, 21:46
A colleague (who'd spent not some considerable time studying his colloquial Estonian internet phrasebook) recently responded to an Estonian freighter captain's impecable English greeting over the R/T.

A perplexed but amused member of the flight crew later on asked if he really meant to say "Donkey was today"....

Lon More
9th Aug 2005, 22:17
Glaswegian phraseology

Acknowledge - Djaunnerstawn pal?
Affirmative - Aye atsrite
Break – Hodoan
Correction – Aw****
How do you read? - Yegoatyer lugsoan?
I say again - Wanmertime pal
Negative - Noway pal
Over – Overinnat
Out – Ahmoaf
Pass your message – Geezrapatter
Read back - Whiddajist tellye?
Roger - Okay pal
Say again - Geezrapatter again
Speak slower – Geezitininglish
Stand by – Hodoanahmbizzy
That is correct - Spotoan / Atsragemme
Verify – Yerjokin
Wilco – Naeborra
Words twice - Acannaunnerstawn, geezrapatter twiceower
Cleared to land – Getoan ragrunn
Line up and hold - Hodoan ratar
Cleared take off – Oanyer bike / Oanyer wyepal


There was a German colleague at Maastricht who tried to say "Dosvidanya" to an Aeroflot pilot and it came out as "Gröss Britannia"

Richard Taylor
10th Aug 2005, 06:21
The word "Fit" in Aiberdeen has different meanings - you can construct a sentence up here where the word has different meanings:

"Fit like min,fit's 'at on yer fit"?

"HOW are you,WHAT'S that on your FOOT?"

Incidentally,a particular BA pilot when flying to ABZ always greets the approach controller with "...Fit like...".I've yet to hear them respond with "Nae bad".

In Dundee they just use plurals:

Mum to son: Where that meat peh (pie) ?
Son to mum: O,I E I A (Oh,I ate it all).

Gargleblaster
10th Aug 2005, 07:40
If anybody here talks to Reykjavík (or is it Iceland) Radio going over the pond, you could try to impress them with this:

Good day: Goðan dag (the 'ð' is pronounced as the 'th' in ('this')
Good evening: Gott kvöld (the 'ö' pronounced as the 'ö' in Köln (the German town))
Good night: Goða nott
Good bye: Bless bless

jangler909
11th Aug 2005, 12:39
Here's a few phrases in Finnish with pronounciation tips:

HELLO (informal) = "terve" [say: "TEHR-veh"]
GOOD DAY = "hyvää päivää" ["HUU-vaa PIGH-vaa"]
GOOD MORNING = "hyvää huomenta" ["HUU-vaa HOO-oh-mehn-tah"]
GOOD EVENING = "hyvää iltaa" ["HUU-vaa EEL-tah"]
GOOD NIGHT = "hyvää yötä" ["HUU-vaa UU-eu-ta"]
GOODBYE = "näkemiin" ["NAK-eh-meen"]
GOODBYE (informal) = "hei hei" ["HAY-hay"]
THANK YOU = "kiitos" ["KEE-tohss"]

M609
11th Aug 2005, 18:17
Despite what some may have told a UK Helo crew (Or at least we hope it's the case!)

"Dra til helvete" is not Norwegian for "Good bye"!!!!

:p :p

Jerricho
11th Aug 2005, 18:40
What is it Norwegian for then ;)

M609
11th Aug 2005, 18:45
:mad: :mad: :mad: (Go to a certain place)

JayeRipley
12th Aug 2005, 11:38
Not quite relevant but:

A colleague always says "the height checks" when given a level check on departure. I've often wondered whether the CSA crews think he's asking for another one! :ouch:

Spuds McKenzie
12th Aug 2005, 13:54
In Zurich:

Hello: "Grüezi"

Good morning: "Guete Morge"

Good evening: "Guete'n'Ohbe"

Bye: "Ade", "Tschüss", "Uf wederlose", "Tschau"

Thank you: "Danke", "Merci"

atco-matic
13th Aug 2005, 17:45
Typing these phonetically as I haven't a clue how to spell them... feel free to correct if any are wrong...

Good evening:

In Finnish: Hoover-ilter
In Maltese: Ee-lie-la-tie-ev
In Turkish: Ee-ak-sham-lar

Portuguese:

Bom-dia= good day
Bom-noite=good night

Greek:

Kalimera- good morning
Kalispera- good evening

Xfr8dog
14th Aug 2005, 00:32
In New York:
How ya dooin.
(BTW Marker on the ILS 4R EWR is DOOIN)

In Texas:
Howdy

Anywhere in the US:
See ya!

DirtyPierre
14th Aug 2005, 14:06
Jerricho,

Don't forget the alternative to Gidday, "hooroo".

Hooroo to you blue.