zaijian or 再见。
明天 [míng tiān]
"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 would say "nous verrons demain" in French to mean "we will see tomorrow."
明天 [míng tiān]
"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.
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 would say "nous verrons demain" in French to mean "we will see tomorrow."
You say "See you tomorrow" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "mari e lola".
In Mandarin, "see you later" can be translated as "再见" (zài jiàn), which literally means "see you again".
You say "zaijian" or 再见。This also means "goodbye" but it also means "see you soon"
It is more grammatically correct to say "tonight" or "tomorrow" without the preposition "on." So, you would say "I will see you tonight" or "I have a meeting tomorrow."
"à demain" -- it literally means "to tomorrow".
In Chinese, "See you tomorrow" is said as "明天见" (Míngtiān jiàn).