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 soonSee 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
- 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