Vale/valete.
1) To be well/Be in good health (used as a farewell) 2) Farewell/goodbye
The derivatives of the Latin word "vale" include "valeo" meaning "to be strong" or "to be well" and "valediction" meaning "a farewell."
Vale - it is Latin for farewell.
No its Latin comes from ''carne vale'' which means farewell to meat.
Closest translation might be 'carne vale' as this thought to be were the word comes from. this means 'farewell to meat'.
The Latin equivalent of 'when goodbye means forever' is Quando 'vale' significat 'semper'. In the word-by-word translation, the dependent conjunction 'quando' means 'when'. The verb 'vale' means 'farewell, goodbye'. The verb 'significat' means '[he/she/it] does mean, is meaning, means'. The adverb 'semper' means 'always, forever'.
It is a diminutive of Valentius, which is derived from Latin Valerius, which is from the root meaning "health".The Latin word for "farewell", vale, is from the same root. As you part from your friend, you wish him good health.
Farewell = vaarwel
Farewell is another word for good-bye.
The Greek word for farewell is apoheretismos [αποχαιρετισμός].
fare + well = farewell
Vale is farewell if you are speaking to one person. Valete is if you are speaking to more than one person.