Sir,
I would like you to correct your post.
It is a hoax.
According to Wiki
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,[SUP][/SUP] which was reprinted that same year in
The London Literary Gazette.
The word was extensively used in literature by the 1860s.
To be sure, something like hello had been with us for a long time as a shout that the English had learned from the French in the Middle Ages. Ho là! they would say. It meant both "stop" and "pay attention," or in the words of an early translator, "hoe there, enough, soft soft, no more of that; also, heare you me, or come hither." In various English shouts and reshouts over the centuries, this became holla (1523), hollo, hollow (1542), and hillo, hilloa (1602). For long-distance shouts the ending was lengthened to -oo, leading to halloo (1568) and hulloo (1707). By the nineteenth century the variants included hallo, halloa (1840) and hullo, hulloa (1857).
[h=2]Origin of
HELLO[/h]alteration of
holloFirst Known Use: 1877
Hello - Definition and More from the Free Merriam-Webster Dictionary
It would be nice to research before posting.