Ciao, [il] mio amore is an Italian equivalent of 'Goodbye, My love'. In the word by word translation, the interjection 'ciao' means 'hello' and 'goodbye'. The masculine definite article 'il' means 'the'. It doesn't have to be used, since it's followed by a possessive. The masculine possessive 'mio' means 'my'. The masculine gender noun 'amore' means 'love'. The phrase is pronounced 'chow [eel] MEE-oh ah-MOH-ray'.
Arrivederci
When translated from English to Italian, "Goodbye Sister" becomes "Arrivederci Sorella." In Italian, "arrivederci" is a common way to say goodbye, and "sorella" means sister. The phrase is used to bid farewell to a female sibling or a close female friend.
Ciao, bella! is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Goodbye, beautiful!" The feminine singular greeting also translates into English as "Hello (Hi), beautiful!" according to context. The pronunciation will be "tchow BEL-la" in Italian.
**Goodbye, My Love** from the album *Hit Songs to Remember*
Addio, fratello! for long or permanent separations, Arrivederci, fratello! for opportunities of seeing each other again, and Ciao, fratello! with regular contact are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Goodbye, brother!" The choice depends upon the frequency (in the second and third cases) or infrequency (in the first example) of interactions between listener and speaker. The respective pronunciations will be "ad-DEE-o fra-TEL-lo," "ar-REE-vey-DER-tchee fra-TEL-lo," and tchow fra-TEL-lo" in Italian.
"Goodbye to summer!" in English is Addio all'estate! in Italian.
Arrivederci Roma is a famous classic Italian love song. It translates to "Goodbye to Rome." A chandrapore is another classical song.
"Goodbye, my lover!" in English is Arrivederci, amante mio! in Italian.
Ciao, Ciao! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Hello, Goodbye." The greeting in question means "Bye," "Goodbye," "Hello," or "Hi" according to context. The pronunciation will be "tchow" in Italian.
ciao
Goodbye to Love was created on 1972-06-19.
Goodbye My Love ended on 1999-10-21.
Goodbye My Love was created on 1999-01-09.
Ciao al tuo amore and Ciao dal tuo amore are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Goodbye Your love." The interjection, prepositional combination, masculine singular possessive and noun in the first example literally means "Bye to your love" in English while the second translates literally into English as "Bye from your love." The respective pronunciation will be "tchow al TOO-o a-MO-rey" in the first example and "tchow dal TOO-o a-MO-rey" in the second in Italian.
"So long, not goodbye" in English means A più tardi, ma non addio in Italian.
Ciao is actually an Italian word meaning both hello and goodbye. In Spanish there is chau, which means goodbye.
"Time to Say Goodbye" is a song originally performed in Italian by Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman. The Italian version is titled "Con te partirò," while the English version is known as "Time to Say Goodbye."