Difference between revisions of "Language/Amharic/Vocabulary/How-to-Say-Hello-and-Greetings"
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əndämn walk [for male] | əndämn walk [for male] | ||
əndämn walsh [for female] | əndämn walsh [for female] | ||
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|good night | |good night | ||
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|ሳመ : samä | |ሳመ : samä | ||
መሳም : mäsam | መሳም : mäsam | ||
|- | |- | ||
|please | |please |
Revision as of 11:49, 25 January 2022
ጤና ይስጥልኝ! Amharic Learners! 😃
➡ Do you want to learn how to say “Hello” in Amharic?
Greetings are an important part of any language because they allow you to connect and communicate with others.
If you’re planning a trip to the country or are trying to learn Amharic, keep reading to discover some of the most important greetings.
Greeting plays a critical role in speeding up your assimilation to the community. Even though the way Ethiopians greet each other might differ slightly from region to region or place to place, it is always an important part of social interaction. Sometimes the greeting may extend to asking after families, cattle, sheep, crop yield, weather conditions, etc. It is also common, particularly in the countryside, to greet someone who you don’t know.
While greeting and taking leave, bowing, shaking hands and removing hats are common. Kissing one another’s cheeks is also practiced, especially upon meeting after an extended period of time. Using both hands when shaking hands with elders and officials indicates respect (the left hand to support the right forearm OR put both hands on the elder’s hand). Young people in Ethiopia will typically greet each other by shaking hands and bumping shoulders.
Raising the eyebrows is sometimes used to greet someone in a situation in which someone doesn’t want or is unable to talk, or in a situation in which the two people are very familiar with one another.
Upon the entry or arrival of elders or officials, it is customary to stand and say, nor (signifying welcome and respect). The person arriving would respond, በግዜር bägzer (lit. “by God”). Not leaving a seat for respected or elder people shows disrespect. Also, putting hands in your pockets while talking with elders shows disrespect.
Greetings can be replied to by saying እግዚአብሔር ይመስገን ïgziabher yïmmäsgän. A person will be happy if you call her or him by name while greeting.
Let’s get started! 🤗
Greetings
English | Amharic |
---|---|
teanastëllën: general greeting | ጤና ይስጥልኝ |
tadiyaas: informal greeting | ታዲያስ |
selam: informal greeting | ሰላም |
indemin adderu: morning greeting (respectful) | አንደምን፡አደሩ |
indemin adderk: morning greeting, spoken to a man | እንደምን፡አደርክ |
indemin addersh: morning greeting, spoken to a woman | እንደምን፡አደርሽ |
indet adderk: morning greeting, spoken to a man | እንዴት፡አደርክ? |
indet addersh: morning greeting, spoken to a woman | እንዴት፡አደርሽ? |
indemin walu: afternoon greeting (respectful) | አንደምን፡ዋሉ? |
indemin walk: afternoon greeting, spoken to a man | እንደምን፡ |
indemin walsh: afternoon greeting, spoken to a woman | እንደምን፡ዋልሸ? |
indet walk: afternoon greeting, spoken to a man | እንዴት፡ዋልክ? |
indet walsh: afternoon greeting, spoken to a woman | እንዴት፡ዋልሸ? |
indemin ameshu: evening greeting (respectful) | አንደምን፡አመሹ |
indemin amesheh: evening greeting, spoken to a man | አንደምን፡አመሸህ? |
indemin ameshesh: evening greeting, spoken to a woman | አንደምን፡አመሸሸ? |
indet amesheh: evening greeting, spoken to a man | እንዴት፡አመሸህ? |
indet ameshesh: evening greeting, spoken to a woman | እንዴት፡አመሸሸ? |
indemin alleh: how are you? spoken to a man | እንደምን፡አለህ፧ |
indemin allesh: how are you? spoken to a woman | እንደምን፡አለሸ፧ |
indemin allachihu: how are you? spoken to a group | እንደምን፡አላችሁ፧ |
dehna nenye: reply to እንደምን አለህ፧, እንደምን አለሸ፧, and እንደምን አላችሁ፧ | ደህና፡ነኝ |
ameseginalehugn: thank you | አመሰግናለሁ |
betam ameseginalehugn: thank you very much | ጣም አመሰግናለሁኝ |
dehina neh: how are you? spoken to a man | ደህና፡? |
dehina nesh: how are you? spoken to a woman | ደህና፡ነሸ? |
dehina newot: how are you? spoken to a group | ደህና፡? |
indemin neh: how are you? informal, spoken to a man | እንደምን፡ነህ? |
indemin nesh: how are you? informal, spoken to a woman | እንደምን፡ነሸ? |
indet neh: how are you?, informal | እንዴት፡ነህ? |
inkuan dehna metah: welcome greeting spoken to a man | እንኳን፡ደህና፡መጣህ |
inkuan dehna metash: welcome greeting spoken to a woman | እንኳን፡ደህና፡መጣሸ |
inkuan dehna metachu: welcome greeting spoken to a group of people | እንኳን፡ደህና፡መጡ |
hello, hi | ሰላም , ጤና፡ይስጥልኝ
tenaa isteling |
How are you? | እንደምን ነህ
əndämn näh ? [for male] əndämn näsh ? [for female] |
fine, well | ደኅና , መልካም |
I am fine | ደህና፡ነኝ : dehna negn |
name | ስም : səm |
My name is ... | ስሜ ... ነው |
madam
miss |
እሜቴ , እመቤት : əmäbet
ወይዘሪት : wäyzärit |
mister, sir | ጌታዬ , አቶ : ato |
good morning | እንደምን አደርክ
əndämn adärk [for male] əndämn adärsh [for female] |
good afternoon | እንደምን ዋልክ
əndämn walk [for male] əndämn walsh [for female] |
good night | ደህና፡እደሩ
dehna ederu |
goodbye | ደኅና ይዋሉ , ቻው : chaw |
best wishes | መልካም ምኞት |
kiss | ሳመ : samä
መሳም : mäsam |
please | እባክህ(ን) ehbakahen [for male]
እባክሽ ehbakesh [for female] |
thanks | ምስጋና : amesegenalehu |
yes | አዎ , አዎን : awon |
no | አይ : ay |
sorry | ይቅርታ : yəqərəta |
English | አማርኛ |
hello, hi | ሰላም , ጤና፡ይስጥልኝ
tenaa isteling |
How are you? | እንደምን ነህ
əndämn näh ? [for male] əndämn näsh ? [for female] |
fine, well | ደኅና , መልካም |
I am fine | ደህና፡ነኝ : dehna negn |
name | ስም : səm |
My name is ... | ስሜ ... ነው |
madam
miss |
እሜቴ , እመቤት : əmäbet
ወይዘሪት : wäyzärit |
mister, sir | ጌታዬ , አቶ : ato |
good morning | እንደምን አደርክ
əndämn adärk [for male] əndämn adärsh [for female] |
good afternoon | እንደምን ዋልክ
əndämn walk [for male] əndämn walsh [for female] |
good night | ደህና፡እደሩ
dehna ederu |
goodbye | ደኅና ይዋሉ , ቻው : chaw |
best wishes | መልካም ምኞት |
kiss | ሳመ : samä
መሳም : mäsam |
please | እባክህ(ን) ehbakahen [for male]
እባክሽ ehbakesh [for female] |
thanks | ምስጋና : amesegenalehu |
yes | አዎ , አዎን : awon |
no | አይ : ay |
sorry | ይቅርታ : yəqərəta |
Videos
How to greet someone in Amharic
Learn Amharic - General Greetings!