Doviđenja,
Do-vi-dje-nja.
or
chao!
:D
There is no Serbo-croat language. There is Serbian and there is Croatian. They may seem same but they have major differences. "Goodbye" in Croatian and also in Serbian would be "Doviđenja".
There is no such language as "Yugoslavian." Please specify: Bosnian, Macedonian, Croatian, Serbian, or Slovene.
You can say "Doviđenja," which is more formal. Or just "bok." I've also heard people just say "Haj ćao!"
You say "adijo" or "nasvidenje" if it's more formal.
You say vidimo se...it's pronounced exactly as it is written. vi-di-mo-se
"ćao" or "doviđenja"
good bye or bye
Aurevoir. A bientôt. But if you say "good bye" or "bye bye" everyone understands you.
"Good-bye."
bye
In India, you can say bye in multiple ways such as "goodbye", "bye-bye", "see you later", or "take care" depending on the region and context.
I Say Good-bye was created on 2001-11-07.
In India, "good-bye" can be said as "Alvida" in Hindi or "Namaste" as a more informal way of bidding farewell.
La korn = Good bye or bye bye
You can say "bravo"
Don't Say Good-Bye was created on 2009-06-24.
say bye bye
In Yiddish, you can say "tsayt a gezunt" to say goodbye, which means "stay healthy".