see you (later)

see you (later)

Goodbye (for now); see you again soon. OK, I've got to go—see you later! See you, man. I had a really great time.
See also: see
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

See you.

 and See ya.
Inf. Good-bye. (See also I'll see you later.) Good game, Tom. See ya. See you, old chum. Give me a ring.
See also: see
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

ˈsee you (aˈround)

,

ˌsee you ˈlater

(also (I’ll) be ˈseeing you) (spoken) used to say goodbye to somebody who you expect to see again soon
See also: see
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

See you

and See ya
interj. Good-bye. See you, old chum. Give me a ring.
See also: see

See you later

and CUL8R
sent. & comp. abb. I will see you later. (see also L8TR. Common colloquial. Also said to people one knows one will never see again.) Have a great trip, Mary. See you later. Bye. CUL8R.
See also: later, see
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions

see you later

Goodbye. This somewhat loose phrase—one need not necessarily intend to see a person in the future—dates from the latter part of the nineteenth century and has been widely adopted as a farewell. Children play on it with the rhyming See you later, alligator, sometimes adding on in a while, crocodile. These rhyming plays were popularized in a song, “See You Later, Alligator," by R. C. Guidry, sung in the film Rock around the Clock (1956). The telephone equivalent, used to end a conversation, is Talk to you later, a more recent phrase that is similarly widespread.
See also: later, see
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • on one's
  • on someone's
  • (I've) got to go
  • other than
  • other than (something)
  • out of one's
  • save someone's skin
  • (Have you) been OK?
  • pillow-biter
  • monkey's uncle, I'll be/am a