bye
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++bye1 /baɪ/ ●●● S1 interjection informalGOODBYE goodbye 再见,拜拜 Bye, Dave. 再见,戴夫。bye for now (=used to say that you will see or speak to someone again soon) 一会儿见bye2 noun [countable] DSa situation in a sports competition in which a player or a team does not have an opponent to play against and continues to the next part of the competition 轮空〔指体育比赛中因没有对手而直接进入下一轮比赛〕
Examples from the Corpus
bye• Banbridge, Dungannon, Bangor and North have byes to the second round.• But the finger stayed down and, to add insult, Sri Lanka's batsmen trotted a cheeky leg bye.• They had talked about enjoying the bye week.• Since the advent of the bye week in 1990, the Rams are 3-5 the week afterward.• Maybe it was the bye week hex.• The Raiders actually have had two weeks to prepare for Denver, with both teams coming off their bye week.bye- /baɪ/ prefix another spelling of by- by-的另一种拼法Origin bye1 (1700-1800) goodbye bye2 (1800-1900) by Corpus goodbye
See by for more
bye
bye1 S1 /baɪ/
interjection
Bye, Dave.
bye for now (=used to say that you will see or speak to someone again soon)
▪ goodbye used when you are leaving or when someone is leaving you. Goodbye sounds rather formal and is used especially when talking to people you do not know well. In everyday English people usually just say bye: ‘Goodbye, Mrs Moore.’ ‘Goodbye, Dr Aziz.’ | Thank you for calling. Goodbye.
▪bye goodbye: ‘Bye, Annie.’ ‘Bye, Mom,’ she said, kissing her mother on the cheek. | Bye everyone! | Bye for now (=used especially on the phone when you will speak to someone soon) - call me if you need anything.
▪see you informal used when saying goodbye to a friend who you will see again soon: See you, Darren. | ‘I’m going now.’ ‘Okay. See you tomorrow.’ | Safe trip back guys and we’ll see you soon.
▪later/catch you later informal used when saying goodbye to a friend you will see again soon. These expressions sound very informal and are used especially by young people: Catch you later, Matt. | ‘Later, Mike.’ ‘Later, Steve.’
▪see you around informal used when saying goodbye to someone and you are not sure when you will see them again: He spent the night with me and then just said ‘See you around’ and left.
▪so long American English used when saying goodbye to someone who you will not see again for a long time: ‘So long,’ he said. ‘Don’t forget to write.’ | She grabbed Nick by the shoulders and hugged him affectionately. ‘So long, Nick.’
▪have a good weekend/a great trip etc used when saying goodbye to someone to wish them a good weekend, an enjoyable trip etc: Have a nice weekend. | Have a great time at the concert, guys!
▪have a nice day used by people working in shops when saying goodbye to customers: Here’s your change. Have a nice day.
▪take care used when saying goodbye to someone, especially someone you like every much, to show that you care about them: ‘Bye love ! Take care.’ ‘You too! Bye!’
▪cheerio British English informal goodbye. Cheerio sounds rather old-fashioned and is used especially by older people: Right, well we’re going now, cheerio then!
▪cheers British English informal goodbye - used especially by younger people: Cheers, mate! See you soon.
bye2 S3
noun [countable]
| I |
interjection Date: 1700-1800
Origin: goodbye
informal goodbye:Origin: goodbye
bye for now (=used to say that you will see or speak to someone again soon)
| THESAURUS |
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| II |
noun [countable] Date: 1800-1900
Origin: by
a situation in a sports competition in which a player or a team does not have an opponent to play against and continues to the next part of the competition
Origin: by