"Goodbye" in Flemish is "tot ziens" or "vaarwel".
Goodbye can be 'tot ziens' (until I see you) or 'dag' which can also be used as a greeting. It's a question of tone.
In Guarani, "goodbye" is pronounced as "adiosu."
Goodbye in Russian is pronounced as "do svidaniya" (до свидания).
In Pashto, "goodbye" is pronounced as "khudahafiz" (خدا حافظ).
"Goodbye" in Flemish is "tot ziens" or "vaarwel".
Goodbye can be 'tot ziens' (until I see you) or 'dag' which can also be used as a greeting. It's a question of tone.
In Guarani, "goodbye" is pronounced as "adiosu."
Goodbye in Russian is pronounced as "do svidaniya" (до свидания).
In Pashto, "goodbye" is pronounced as "khudahafiz" (خدا حافظ).
Goodbye in Maori is pronounced "haere rā" (pronounced ha-reh rah).
"Sayonara" is the Japanese word for "goodbye," which is phonetically pronounced "sci-yoh-nah-rah."
There's no such language as "Belgian". The three official languages of Belgium are French, Flemish/Dutch, and German.
"Hello" is pronounced as "cześć" [chesh-ch], and "goodbye" is pronounced as "do widzenia" [doh-vee-dzen-yah].
Tschüß - goodbye - tsch-ewe-ss
In Flemish, "Flemish" is referred to as "Vlaams."
Maeght is a Flemish name (the Maeght family comes from the North of France, near Belgium) and should be pronounced as "Makt".