Mingtian jian.
In Chinese, "See you tomorrow" is said as "明天见" (Míngtiān jiàn).
In Chinese, you can say "再见" (zài jiàn) to say see you later.
"Kal milange" is how you say "see you tomorrow" in Punjabi.
To say "see you tomorrow" in Portuguese, you would say "até amanhã".
"До завтра" (Do zavtra) is how you say "see you tomorrow" in Russian.
You say "See you tomorrow" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "mari e lola".
In Chinese, you can say "再见" (zài jiàn) to say see you later.
Mingtian.
To say "see you tomorrow" in Portuguese, you would say "até amanhã".
Yes. "Hasta manyana" literally means "until tomorrow", so it is the exact equivalent of "See you tomorrow", which makes sense to say if you plan to see this person tomorrow.However, any parting remark is really interchangeable. For example, in English, you could say "See you tomorrow" even if you are not going to see that person tomorrow or you could say "See you later" even if you are not going to see that person later in the day.
You say "See you tomorrow" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "mari e lola".
You would say "nous verrons demain" in French to mean "we will see tomorrow."
The most commonly used is "zaijian" or 再见。If you want to say something more interesting, see you tomorrow is "mingtianjian" or 明天见。
"à demain" -- it literally means "to tomorrow".
Hasta mañana.
"До завтра" (Do zavtra) is how you say "see you tomorrow" in Russian.
u say ???
Probably the most common way to say this is "nos vemos mañana". This uses the reflexive form of the verb "ver", and literally means "We see ourselves (each other) tomorrow". Usually this would be interpreted as "see you tomorrow". You could also say "hasta mañana", or "until tomorrow". Another would be "Voy a verte mañana", or "I am going to see you tomorrow". "Te veré mañana" is "I will see you tomorrow".