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What does Good Bye means?

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zMaestro View Drop Down
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    Posted: 17 May 2006 at 10:53am
What does Good Bye means? and when was it first used?
 
Anyone knows?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote WebWiz-Bruce Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17 May 2006 at 4:35pm
It says on there a synonsum for Goodbye is 'eighty-eights'

I've never heard anyone say 'eighty-eights' when leaving, or is this a sl*g word for goodbye outside of England?
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apparently it comes from "God Be With You"

Quote [Alteration (influenced by good day), of God be with you.]
Word History: No doubt more than one reader has wondered exactly how goodbye is derived from the phrase “God be with you.” To understand this, it is helpful to see earlier forms of the expression, such as God be wy you, god b'w'y, godbwye, god buy' ye, and good-b'wy. The first word of the expression is now good and not God, for good replaced God by analogy with such expressions as good day, perhaps after people no longer had a clear idea of the original sense of the expression. A letter of 1573 written by Gabriel Harvey contains the first recorded use of goodbye: “To requite your gallonde [gallon] of godbwyes, I regive you a pottle of howdyes,” recalling another contraction that is still used.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Tegwin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 18 May 2006 at 1:41pm
Originally posted by -boRg- -boRg- wrote:

It says on there a synonsum for Goodbye is 'eighty-eights'

I've never heard anyone say 'eighty-eights' when leaving, or is this a sl*g word for goodbye outside of England?


In ametuer radio talk they say Seventy Threes (73s)... which means Good bye, or so long etc.


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