- published: 23 Oct 2015
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Hello is a salutation or greeting in the English language. It is attested in writing as early as the 1830s.
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, which was reprinted that same year in The London Literary Gazette.
The word was extensively used in literature by the 1860s.[citation needed]
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, hello is an alteration of hallo, hollo, which came from Old High German "halâ, holâ, emphatic imperative of halôn, holôn to fetch, used especially in hailing a ferryman." 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 là 'there'). As in addition to hello, halloo,hallo, hollo, hullo and (rarely) hillo also exist as variants or related words, the word can be spelt using any of all five vowels.
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.Alexander Graham Bell initially used Ahoy (as used on ships) as a telephone greeting. However, in 1877, Edison wrote to T.B.A. David, the president of the Central District and Printing Telegraph Company of Pittsburgh:
And when my drug will start to get me down
Shes always there you know she always can be found
And never lifted way to much on me
She always seems to be in touch with me you see she knows
And I am drawn to her it is as though
I were a moth and she the candles' glow
And when the world has got the best of me
Shes seems to have the power to change my destiny
I try to tell her what is on my mind
And even though the words are hard to find she kknows
That when she comes to me
It is as though
I were the earth and she new fallen snow
And I will sing of all the things she knows