The most used word for goodbye in Italian and French literally means see you again

>The most used word for goodbye in Italian and French literally means see you again
>Spanish and Portuguese have that word too but prefers "God be with you"
Literally muzzie tier you guys were right all along.

The Balkans also had some Muslim (Turkish) influence on their language, don't be so down

we have the same word, "addio", it literally means "to God", and it's used when you want to say "goodbye for ever" or "I'll never see you again"

>He doesn't say Chau
>He says Adios like in the simpsons

Fuck you i'd rather say Adios than Hasta luego, one word is enough.

Alhamdulillah

Yo digo abur todo el rato desu

Pretty sure "adieu" means god be with you literally

>Adios
Muzzie/medieval tier
>Hasta luego
European, white, secular.

maybe but we still mostly say "see you"

we
>say "moi" when greeting each other
>say "moi" when leaving
>if you want to be affectionate you say "moimoi" when leaving

same here, adieu. Except people in the south say it as a regular good bye, at least in my grandparents' south western village

...

same here

>forces god down our throats
>refuses to mention him
Good ol europe

moin moin?

Except the most used word for goodbye in italian is ciao, literally nobody says arrivederci in an informal setting

Did someone say MoiMoi?

>Germans say ciao

We love you so why do you hate us cousin

Goodbye is God be with you as well. I dont see the problem

>Adeus
>Christian crusader kebab-remover white man of God

>chau
>atheistic degenerate kebab-accepting cocksucker

Aloha is my greeting of choice.

We unironically say inshallah too.

>oxalá is inshallah
>mfw we were the Moors all along

Mushi Mushi

You will never understand the concepts of melancholy and comfyness.
You guys are too materialistic and attached to luxury

more like Tschau tho


>tfw Bavarians say Grüß Gott
literally medieval peasants

>Iberians
Daily reminder Iberia is not Europe

We use "tchau" for goodbye here. Italian influence, I think.

Now I understand why finns characters in anime say Moi every second

Why does Cannavacciuolo say addios?

And for goodbye it's "Pfüa Gott", meaning "may god protect you" :^)

Same here.

But it's being replaced with "até" or the corrupted "inté", meaning "until [next time]"

Adeus is a bit more polite and/or caring, though.

>inte
Portugal caipira confirmado

What do you mean? It's an old-people thing that we say somewhat jokingly.

Atheism is for plebbitors, never forget that.

Adeus (à + Deus), here.
However most people simply say "tchau" which is pronounced just like the Italian ciao. It's probably because of you people.

But that's what goodbye means. It's a shortening of God be with you.

Because you are dumb and garbage overall. Your whole existance is a divine joke to prevent this earth for being a heavenly place and most importantly you rape goats

Ghis la revido!

>not saying "falou, valeu!"

Yo digo 'con dios'.

We say :''Até já'' for ''see you soon''.
''Até amanhã'' for ''see you tomorrow''

I always say "bai"

Ola meu.

We also have Adieu m8

>muzzie tier
>Catholicism

pick one

This is amazing.

In Dutch they say "dag" to say hello and "dag" with a rising and falling tone to say "goodbye"

Genocide spaniards when?

Depends on the country, here saying "adios" sounds weird and is rarely used, the most used here is "chau"

this, adios is for mexicans and centracas.
we say chao/chau

No, "adieu" ("à Dieu") is what you say to someone you will never see again, ever. You will likely never seriously say it in your entire life. Literally it means "to God", in a sense that you'll meet again after your death.

We say "au revoir", literally "to resee" but that doesn't exist, so it's like "to review", "to the next time i see you".

Hasta comes from an Arabic word, kaffir scum

>>Adios
>Muzzie/medieval tier
>>Hasta luego
>European, white, secular.
>>Hasta la Vista, Baby
>Austrian, metallic, bulletproof

Because terroni

>>Spanish and Portuguese have that word too but prefers "God be with you"
We also have that, it's adieu (to god, litteraly). It means farewell.

To say good bye we say:
Adeus
Xau
Até logo/Até amanhã/Até já

nos vemos masterrace

>Goodbye = God be with ye
wtf I hate English now

To be more precise, it was originally "I recommand you to god", so suposedly what we say before to die.

>secular
>good

I found the Podemos voter

>ojala
really made me think

that really is the best. I feel like a hip youngster when I say it.
>falou means "you said" if translated exactly, it's a type of goodbye, and valeu is a thank you, in a sense that the exchange was worth it

>tfw always say "oi" and "tchau" because they can be spoken very quickly