"Cheers" is a drinking salutation similar to, "to your good health" or "bottoms up", etc.
The younger generation seems to have adopted the expression as a an expression of greeting like "Goodbye" or even as a term of compliance such "OK" or "I understand" or "I will do what you ask", etc.
It is often used as a toast when having an alcoholic drink.
Slancha is an anglicisation. In Irish it's "Sláinte", it means "cheers"
cheers?
cheers = "na zdraví" and it actually means "on our health"
Cheers; Polish
cheers
they mean cheers
I would say UK 8 is a NZ 10, hope this helps, cheers
If you mean cheers, as in a toast to fortune and good health, a common word is "salud."
It is a toast, like cheers
after receipt of order, cheers!
Cheers - 1982 Suspicion 4-14 was released on: USA: 16 January 1986 UK: 2 May 1986
I'm not familiar with the term "slangava." It may be a slang term or a typo. Could you provide more context or clarify what you mean by "slangava"?