In speech: "au revoir monsieur / au revoir madame"
in a mail: "cordialement"
in a formal letter: "je vous prie d'agréer, Madame, Monsieur, l'expression de mes sentiments distingués / de mes sentiments les meilleurs"
A formal goodbye is "da boch chi", meaning good be with you. A less formal way to say this is "hwyl", or you can simply say ta-ta or ta-ra.
Bless is the formal way, bæbæ is colloquial
In Brazil, the most common way to say goodbye is "Tchau." Another informal way to say goodbye is "Adeus." In more formal situations, you can say "Até logo" (See you later) or "Até breve" (See you soon).
Yes, I know about Dutch. The Dutch word for goodbye is "dag" or "tot ziens" which means "see you later".
Russians typically say "Здравствуйте" (Zdravstvuyte) to say hello in a formal way or "Привет" (Privet) in an informal setting. To say goodbye, they commonly use "До свидания" (Do svidaniya) which means "Goodbye."
Aloha ʻoe (informal) or A hui hou (formal) is how you say goodbye in Hawaiian.
Hello in Romansh...Bun Di, but I'm not sure about goodbye?
I think it's a formal way to say goodbye/bye implying the person cares about you.
It depends on how formal you want to be. To say goodbye, from less formal to very formal: chao nos vemos hasta luego / hasta pronto To say take care: cuídate (tú) cuídese (usted)
Dovidenia? I think, but I believe this is formal, I'll have to inquire with my Slovokian friend how she says goodbye.
There are several ways to say goodbye. A formal way to say goodbye is- Viszontlátásra!Informal, and or playful phrases are:- Szia!* (Used both to greet and say goodbye)- Pápá (a little child would say that)*note: Hungarian doesn't use auxiliaries to mean more people in phrases. Instead the fact that you say goodbye to more than one people is 'coded' into the verb:Szia (goodbye, my friend)Sziasztok (goodbye, my friendS)
The more formal way is Na shledanou.