do you really expect me to know this! come on lady! no, i guess not dude or dudette and thanks for the wonderful answer, that ought to work just fine :)
, goodbye and peace in Hebrew is "Shalom" (שלום).
goodbye in Hebrew "Le'Hit'Ra'Ot".
Shalom is the word for Peace in Hebrew as well as Hello and Goodbye
Goodbye in Hebrew is Lehitra'ot - להתראות
sheh yihyeh yom madhim beyachad (שיהיה יום מדהים ביחד)
The sentence structure is a bit awkward. It would be better to say, "Have a wonderful day ahead" or "I hope you have a wonderful day ahead."
The standard way would be 'shalom, chaver' - goodbye friend. In conversational slang Hebrew, some just use 'bye' (ביי) too.
"Jewish" is not a language. Jews have always spoken Hebrew and lots of them speak Yiddish. Goodbye in either of the above is: Shalom (lit. peace) A more casual way of saying goodbye in Hebrew is 'l'hitraot' (li-HEET-rah-ote) which means 'see you later'.
good day mate
You can say "Goodbye Mr./Mrs. [Teacher's Last Name], thank you for everything" or "Goodbye, have a great day!"
in Hebrew it would be emet, if you mean the word truth. but if you are asking about truth as in peace it is shalom( which can also mean hello or goodbye)
In Croatia, you say "Bok" (pronounced "bok") as a casual way to say both hello and goodbye. For a more formal greeting, you can use "Dobar dan" (meaning "Good day"). To say goodbye, you can also use "Doviđenja," which translates to "Goodbye."