Which frase we use in Austria to say good bye depends on the relationship between the ones saying good bye:
We say "Auf Wiedersehen" or "Auf Wiederschauen" when we address someone formerly, people we don't know very good, people of great respect which we don't address with the familiar "du" form. we also use it when leaving a restaurant.
Between friends, family and people we do address with "du" we use the word "Tschüss". Very common is also the dialectal word "Pfiat di", but please note that it's not standard German.
Wiki User
โ 12y agoWiki User
โ 14y agoIch werde Sie Sonntag sehen.
Wiki User
โ 13y agoTschuss, sehe dir am Sonntag!
sleepy bye bye
bye = varate/ irangatte eg: bye, see u later = varate , pinne kanaam
"See" in German means "Sea"If you mean how do you say "to see" in German, the verb is "sehen"
There is no exact Chinese phrase for "bye for now" but the way to say "Good Bye" is 再見 which literally means "See you again sometime"
its oi-hey or hi( can also be used among friends and aquaintences) konichiwa-good evening for bye its sai yen ara- bye or later ja ne (pronounced) jah nah- see ya or see ya later ja- see ya or bye or you could just say bye-bye
You can't. There is no word for good bye. Just see you again or later
Adios (Goodbye, bye bye) Nos vemos manana (See Ya tomorrow) Hasta luego (See you later) Hasta Pronto (See you Soon) Ciao (Bye)
Goodbye, Bye, Ta ta, Hooroo, See ya later, See ya, Catch ya 'round, See ya 'round
Zai Jian Pronounced: {Tzai-Jien} Literally means: See you again
I'm from Poland. "Good bye" means in polish "do widzenia" or "żegnaj". We often say "cześć" or "do zobaczenia" (see you; bye).
We say bye, goodbye, ta-ta, see ya, laters... rarely ever does anyone actually say "cheerio" even though it is stereotypically British. TTFN ta ta for now
Good-bye, you say LA REVEDERE [la'-rehvehdehra] which means "see you soon" Good-bye, you say PA [pah] which means "good bye for ever"