bye= see you, see you= see (c) you (u or you or ya)
My understanding is "good bye" comes from "God be wi' ye" (God be with you)
"Bye" is short for "goodbye" and means the same as "farewell" (originally Fare thee well). The word "goodbye" derives from the old English "God be with (ye)you". It is a form of blessing as one leaves, and the opposite of "hello".
Goodbye Comes from "God be with (ye)you"
God Be With Thee. God Be With Ye. Good Bye. Bye. --- That or your question is more nonsensical than it looks.
That would be "Good-bye!"
Bye is a shortened form of good-bye (1591, from godbwye (1573), itself a contraction of God be with ye, infl. by good day, good evening, etc.) Reduplication bye-bye is recorded from 1709, though as a sound used to lull a child to sleep it is attested from 1636.
This phrase does not appear anywhere in Shakespeare. "God den" was a shortened form of "good evening" in the same way that "good bye" was and is a shortened form of "God be with ye".
Ye, it is.
"By" means that something is close or alongside e.g. the river ran by the road. "Bye" is a shortened form of "Goodbye" which is a corruption of "God be with ye" in Old English.
C-O-P-S- - 1988 The Case of Big Boss's Bye Bye was released on: USA: 8 November 1988
____________________________________________ 'bye' or 'bye-bye' or 'goodbye' are the same in Armenian! and can be spelled as ts-de-sou-tchyoun TSDESSOUTCHYOUN
Bye-Bye the same in English