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Definição e significado de hello

Definição

hello (n.)

1.an expression of greeting"every morning they exchanged polite hellos"

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Merriam Webster

HelloHel*lo" (?), interj. & n. An exclamation used as a greeting, to call attention, as an exclamation of surprise, or to encourage one. This variant of Halloo and Holloo has become the dominant form. In the United States, it is the most common greeting used in answering a telephone.

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Definiciones (más)

definição - Wikipedia

Sinónimos

hello

hello!, hullo!

hello (adv.)

hallo, hi, hullo

hello (n.)

hey, how-do-you-do, howdy, hallo  (British), hi  (American), hullo  (British)

hello! (int.)

hello, hullo!

Locuções

'Hello,' Said the Stick • Ceramic Hello • Everyone Says Hello • First Wave Hello • Golden hello • Goodbye Country (Hello Nightclub) • Goodbye and Hello • Hello (2008 film) • Hello (After Edmund album) • Hello (Aya Ueto song) • Hello (Cat Empire song) • Hello (Evanescence song) • Hello (Follow Your Own Star) • Hello (I Love You) • Hello (Ice Cube song) • Hello (LL Cool J song) • Hello (Lionel Richie song) • Hello (Poe song) • Hello (The Beloved song) • Hello (The Capes album) • Hello (Tristan Prettyman album) • Hello (band) • Hello (disambiguation) • Hello (song) • Hello Afrika • Hello Afrika (song) • Hello Again • Hello Again (The Cars song) • Hello Again (film) • Hello Again (musical) • Hello America • Hello America (Def Leppard song) • Hello America (disambiguation) • Hello Angel • Hello Bastards • Hello Beautiful • Hello Beloved • Hello Big Man • Hello Broadway • Hello Brooklyn • Hello Brother (1994 film) • Hello Brother (1999 film) • Hello CD of the Month Club • Hello Cinema • Hello Cleveland! • Hello Crazy World • Hello Cruel World • Hello Darlin' • Hello Darlin' (song) • Hello Dave • Hello Destiny • Hello Doctor • Hello EP • Hello Echo (Tour Edition) • Hello Everything • Hello Friend • Hello Friends • Hello Friends! • Hello From Mars • Hello Garci scandal • Hello Goodbye (band) • Hello Goodbye (disambiguation) • Hello Heartbreak • Hello I Love You • Hello I'm Dolly Tour • Hello It's Me (Lani Hall album) • Hello Kitty • Hello Kitty Online • Hello Kitty Stratocaster • Hello Kitty murder • Hello Kitty no Hanabatake • Hello Kitty's Cube Frenzy • Hello Kitty's Furry Tale Theater • Hello Kolkata • Hello Lisa • Hello Little Girl • Hello Lonely (Walk Away from This) • Hello Love • Hello Love (Chris Tomlin album) • Hello Lovers • Hello Magazine • Hello Mahalo • Hello Mary Lou • Hello Master • Hello Mister Whiskers • Hello Mom! • Hello Mother, Goodbye! • Hello Mum! • Hello My Dear Wrong Number • Hello Nasty • Hello News • Hello Nurse • Hello Nurse (vaudeville) • Hello Operator • Hello Operator (band) • Hello Operator (song) • Hello Out There • Hello Panda • Hello Pappy scandal • Hello Paradise • Hello Pop! • Hello Rockview • Hello Saferide • Hello Sailor • Hello Sailor (Hello Sailor album) • Hello Sailor (album) • Hello Sailor (band) • Hello Sailor (novel) • Hello Sailor(band) • Hello Sandy Allen • Hello Sir Records • Hello Sister, Goodbye Life • Hello Starling • Hello Sunshine • Hello There Big Boy! • Hello Tomorrow • Hello Trouble • Hello Walls • Hello Waveforms • Hello Young Lovers • Hello Young Lovers (album) • Hello Zepp • Hello and Welcome • Hello convention • Hello gorgeous • Hello project shuffle units • Hello world • Hello world program • Hello! (album) • Hello! Lady Lynn • Hello! Ma Baby • Hello! Project Kids • Hello! Project shuffle unit • Hello! Sandybell • Hello! The Best New Music of 1997 • Hello, Are You There? • Hello, Avalanche • Hello, Blue Roses • Hello, Cheeky! • Hello, Control • Hello, Dear Numbers • Hello, Dolly! (film) • Hello, Dolly! (musical) • Hello, Frisco, Hello • Hello, Good Friend • Hello, Goodbye (Grounded for Life episode) • Hello, Goodbye (album) • Hello, Hawaii, How Are You? • Hello, Hello • Hello, Hello I'm Back Again • Hello, Hello It's Good To Be Back • Hello, Hello, I'm Back Again • Hello, Hello, It's Good To Be Back • Hello, I Love You • Hello, I Must Be Going (song) • Hello, I Must Be Going! • Hello, I Must Be Going! (album) • Hello, I Must Be Going! (biography) • Hello, I Must Be Going! (disambiguation) • Hello, I Must Be Going!(biography) • Hello, I'm Dolly • Hello, I'm Johnny Cash • Hello, I'm Your Aunt! • Hello, Larry • Hello, Little Girl • Hello, Love • Hello, Love You, Goodbye • Hello, Mabel • Hello, Mannequin • Hello, Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle • Hello, My Lover, Goodbye • Hello, Sailor (book) • Hello, Sister! • Hello, Welcome to Bubbletown's Happy Zoo • Hello, Young Lovers (song) • Hello, sailor • Hello-Goodbye • Hello... I'm Johnny Cash • Hotel Hello • If You See Her, Say Hello • Long Hello and Short Goodbye • Mainichi Suteki! Hello Kitty no Life Kit • Say Hello • Say Hello 2 Heaven • Say Hello to Soft Cell • Say Hello to Someone from Massachusetts • Say Hello, Wave Goodbye • Say Hello, Wave Goodbye (EP) • Say hello to my little friend • Say hello to my little friend! • The Album (Hello Sailor album) • The Hello, Goodbye Window • The Kiss Hello • The Long Hello • Time to Say Hello • Timeline of Hello Garci scandal • World Hello Day • You Had Me at Hello (album) • ¡Hello Friends!

Dicionario analógico

Wikipedia

Hello

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Hello is a salutation or greeting in the English language. It is attested in writing as early as the 1830s.

Contents

First use

Hello, with that spelling, was used in publications as early as 1833. These include an 1833 American book called The Sketches and Eccentricities of Col. David Crockett, of West Tennessee,[1] which was reprinted that same year in The London Literary Gazette.[2]

The word was extensively used in literature by the 1860s.[citation needed]

Etymology

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, hello is an alteration of hallo, hollo,[3] which came from Old High German "halâ, holâ, emphatic imper[ative] of halôn, holôn to fetch, used esp[ecially] in hailing a ferryman."[4] It also connects the development of hello to the influence of an earlier form, holla, whose origin is in the French holà (roughly, 'whoa there!', from French 'there').[5]

Telephone

The use of hello as a telephone greeting has been credited to Thomas Edison; according to one source, he expressed his surprise with a misheard Hullo.[6] Alexander Graham Bell initially used Ahoy (as used on ships) as a telephone greeting.[7] However, in 1877, Edison wrote to T.B.A. David, the president of the Central District and Printing Telegraph Company of Pittsburgh:

Friend David, I do not think we shall need a call bell as Hello! can be heard 10 to 20 feet away.

What you think? Edison - P.S. first cost of sender & receiver to manufacture is only $7.00.

By 1889, central telephone exchange operators were known as 'hello-girls' due to the association between the greeting and the telephone.[8]

Hullo

Hello may be derived from Hullo, which the American Merriam-Webster dictionary describes as a "chiefly British variant of hello,"[9] and which was originally used as an exclamation to call attention, an expression of surprise, or a greeting. Hullo is found in publications as early as 1803.[10] The word hullo is still in use, with the meaning hello.[11][12][13][14][15]

Hallo

Hello is alternatively thought to come from the word hallo (1840) via hollo (also holla, holloa, halloo, halloa).[9] The definition of hollo is to shout or an exclamation originally shouted in a hunt when the quarry was spotted:[9] Fowler's has it that "hallo" is first recorded "as a shout to call attention" in 1864.[16]

It is used by Samuel Taylor Coleridge's famous poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner written in 1798

And the good south wind still blew behind,

But no sweet bird did follow,Nor any day for food or playCame to the mariners' hollo!

Hallo is also German, Norwegian and Dutch for Hello.

If I fly, Marcius,/Halloo me like a hare.

Webster's dictionary from 1913 traces the etymology of holloa to the Old English halow and suggests: "Perhaps from ah + lo; compare Anglo Saxon ealā."

According to the American Heritage Dictionary, hallo is a modification of the obsolete holla (stop!), perhaps from Old French hola (ho, ho! + la, there, from Latin illac, that way).[17]Hallo is also used by many famous authors like Enid Blyton.Example:"Hallo!", chorused the 600 children.

The Old English verb, hǽlan (1. wv/t1b 1 to heal, cure, save; greet, salute; gehǽl! Hosanna!), may be the ultimate origin of the word.[18] Hǽlan is likely a cognate of German Heil and other similar words of Germanic origin. Bill Bryson asserts in his book Mother Tongue that "hello" comes from Old English hál béo þu ("Hale be thou", or "whole be thou", meaning a wish for good health).

Cognates

"Hello" is found as a loanword in many other languages. It is often only used when answering the telephone, or as an informal greeting.

LanguageCognateUsage
Afrikaanshallo
Arabicآلو ālōwhen answering the telephone
Bengalihaelo!when answering the telephone
Bulgarianало (alo)when answering the telephone
Catalanhola!friendly (informal) greeting
Croatianhalo?when answering the telephone
Dutchhallo!
Estonianhallo; halloowhen answering the telephone
Finnishhaloo?when answering the telephone
Frenchallô?when answering the telephone
Germanhallo!
Gujaratihello!when answering the telephone
Hungarianhelló!friendly (informal) greeting
halló!when answering the telephone
Hebrewהָלוֹ (hallo)when answering the telephone
Kannadahalloawhen answering the telephone
Lithuanianalio?when answering the telephone
Macedonianало (alo)when answering the telephone
Marathihellowhen answering the telephone
Norwegianhallo!General greeting
Portuguesealô?when answering the telephone
Romanianalowhen answering the telephone
Russianалло (allo), алёwhen answering the telephone
Serbianхало/halowhen answering the telephone
Spanish¡hola!friendly (informal) greeting
¿aló?(Latin America) when answering the telephone
Swedishhallå!
Tagaloghelo!
Turkishalo!when answering the telephone
Vietnamesea lô!when answering the telephone

"Hello, World" computer program

Students learning a new computer programming language will often begin by writing a "Hello, world!" program, which outputs that greeting to a display screen or printer. The widespread use of this tradition arose from an introductory chapter of the book The C Programming Language by Kernighan & Ritchie, which reused the following example taken from earlier memos by Brian Kernighan at Bell Labs:

"hello, world"

Controversy

In 1997, Leonso Canales Jr. from Kingsville, Texas convinced Kleberg County commissioners to designate "heaven-o" as the county's official greeting, on the grounds that the greeting "hello" contains the word "hell", and that the proposed alternative sounds more "positive". "Hello", however, is not etymologically related to "hell".[19]

Perception of “Hello” in other nations

In some other nations, especially the ones that had little contact with foreigners at the time, Westerners were often viewed as people who constantly said “hello” and little else. Jung Chang describes this view as follows:

"In my mind... foreigners said ‘hello’ all the time, with an odd intonation.... When boys played ‘guerrilla warfare,’ which was their version of cowboys and Indians, the enemy side would have thorns glued onto their noses and say ‘hello’ all the time."
Chang, Jung[20]

See also

Greetings in other languages

References

  1. ^ (Anonymous). The Sketches and Eccentricities of Col. David Crockett, of West Tennessee. New York: J. & J. Harper, 1833. p. 144.
  2. ^ "The Sketches and Eccentricities of Col. David Crockett, of West Tennessee." The London Literary Gazette; and Journal of Belles Lettres, Arts, Sciences, &c. No. 883: December 21, 1833. p. 803.
  3. ^ "Hello." Oxford English Dictionary Online. Second Edition, 1989. Oxford University Press. Accessed 09 Sep 2008.
  4. ^ "Hallo." OED Online. Second Edition, 1989. Oxford University Press. Accessed 09 Sep 2008.
  5. ^ "holla, int. and n.". OED Online. Retrieved October 4, 2008.
  6. ^ Allen Koenigsberg. "The First “Hello!”: Thomas Edison, the Phonograph and the Telephone – Part 2". Antique Phonograph Magazine, Vol.VIII No.6. http://www.collectorcafe.com/article_archive.asp?article=800&id=1507. Retrieved 2006-09-13. 
  7. ^ Allen Koenigsberg (1999). "All Things Considered". National Public Radio. http://www2.cs.uh.edu/~klong/papers/hello.txt. Retrieved 2006-09-13. 
  8. ^ "Online Etymology Dictionary". http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=hello&searchmode=none. 
  9. ^ a b c "hullo - Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary". Merriam-webster.com. 2007-04-25. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hullo. Retrieved 2009-09-26. 
  10. ^ The Sporting Magazine. London (1803). Volume 23, p. 12.
  11. ^ phpBB + phpBB Search Engine Indexer. "Hullo From Orkney". Forum.downsizer.net. http://forum.downsizer.net/archive/hullo-from-orkney__o_t__t_36387.html. Retrieved 2009-09-26. 
  12. ^ Piers Beckley (2008-04-23). "Writersroom Blog: Hullo again. Did you miss me?". BBC. http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/writersroom/2008/04/hullo_again.shtml. Retrieved 2009-09-26. 
  13. ^ "Paris for a day | Technology". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2005/feb/23/mobilephones.g2. Retrieved 2009-09-26. 
  14. ^ "Ashes: England v Australia - day one as it happened | Andy Bull and Rob Smyth | Sport | guardian.co.uk". Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2009/jul/16/ashes-england-australia-live-report. Retrieved 2009-09-26. 
  15. ^ "BBC SPORT | Football | Europe | Semi-final clash excites fans". BBC News. 2005-04-14. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/europe/4444713.stm. Retrieved 2009-09-26. 
  16. ^ The New Fowler's, revised third edition by R. W. Burchfield, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198602634, p. 356.
  17. ^ "Hello". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.. 2000. http://www.bartelby.com/61/60/H0136000.html. Retrieved 2006-09-01. 
  18. ^ OEME Dictionaries
  19. ^ "Texas town says goodbye to 'hello'". Minnesota Daily. 17 January 1997. Archived from the original on 15 December 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071215085841/http://www.mndaily.com/articles/1997/01/17/2982. Retrieved 7 September 2008. 
  20. ^ Chang, Jung (1991). Wild Swans. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 247. 

External links

Hello!

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Hello!
CategoriesCelebrity
FrequencyWeekly
First issue1988
Final issue
— Number

-
CompanyHello Ltd (Spain)
CountryUnited Kingdom
Websitewww.hellomagazine.com

Hello! is a weekly magazine specialising in celebrity news and gossip, published in Britain. Hello! sells editions in Britain, Republic of Ireland, India, UAE, Spain, Mexico, Turkey, Russia, Thailand, Greece, Canada, and since 2007 Serbia.

Contents

History

Owned by Spanish publisher Eduardo Sánchez Junco, Hello! was first published in 1988 and is a spin-off of the Spanish magazine ¡Hola!. Between 1998 and 2004 there was also a French version, Ohla !.

Although upmarket and away from the real-life formats of the traditional weekly and supermarket checkout ladies' magazines, media critics laughed at Hello!'s fawning interviews with minor European royals and celebrities. But the highly targeted format quickly built a readership of 2 million copies per issue.

A Mexican edition of ¡Hola! started in 2006; prior to that date, the Mexican publisher reprinted the flagship Spanish title, but repriced locally in Mexican pesos.

Competition

OK! magazine launched in 1993, and went weekly in 1996. Not long after, the first of a new raft of celebrity magazines aimed at more mass-market readership than both Hello! and OK!, hit the news-stands. Now was launched in 1997, joined by Heat in 1999 and then Closer in 2002.

Today, Hello! and rival OK! often try to out-scoop each other, by buying up exclusive rights to celebrity weddings and interviews. OK! currently outsells Hello! by nearly three-to-one.


Website

Hellomagazine.ca
URLwww.hellomagazine.ca
SloganThe place for daily celebrity news
Commercial?yes
Type of siteCelebrity
Available language(s)English
OwnerHello!
Created byHello Ltd. (Spain)
LaunchedJune, 2006
Current statusactive

Hellomagazine.ca is the official website of the weekly celebrity news magazine Hello! Canada, and Canada’s leading celebrity news site.[1] Started in June 2006 to complement the magazine, contains separate content to the weekly magazine, reporting celebrity news on a daily rather than weekly basis. The site is updated throughout the day, seven days a week.

Since it launched with the magazine's trademark bold colour palette it has undergone a redesign which has made it feel lighter and brighter. By January 2008 over 90,000 readers were using hellomagazine.ca. [2]

Content

The site provides readers, about half of whom are women under 34, with photos, news stories and video content in the following categories: actors and actresses, musicians, fashion and models, royalty and statesmen, celebrities and travel.[3]

Daily content on the hellomagazine.ca homepage covers established and up-and-coming Canadian celebrities. It also features comprehensive galleries of the main fashion shows, special events such as The Oscars, Toronto International Film Festival and the Genie Awards. It also contains an extensive list of quizzes on the rich and famous.

The horoscope section is provided by leading British astrologer Jonathan Cainer. Other content includes visual news updates (News In Pix) and profiles on musicians, actors and actresses and statesmen.

Online reader services include social bookmarking.


Litigation

  • 2003 – Catherine Zeta Jones and Michael Douglas sued Hello! for publishing unauthorised photographs of their wedding. Rival magazine OK! had an exclusive contract for pictures of the wedding, and also sued Hello! In November 2003, OK! was awarded £1,033,156 in damages, and Jones and Douglas received £14,600.
  • 2006 – Hello!, which secured the British rights to the first images of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie's newborn daughter, launched legal action with People against two websites that printed a leaked exclusive shot of the couple with their new baby daughter. The leaked photo, which contains Hello! magazine's logo, shows a headline which reads: "The biggest exclusive of the year. Angelina and Brad with their new Baby Shiloh Nouvel." People magazine reportedly paying more than $4 million USD to secure the American rights. [4]

References

External links

 

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