ciao

listen to the pronunciation of ciao
الإنجليزية - التركية
(Yeni Sözcükler) Hoşçakal
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
bye, goodbye
hello, hi (especially US), howdy (US)
Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office (Department of Commerce)
{ü} goodbye (Italian)
a greeting -hello or goodbye, borrowed from Italian language
formulae Some people say `Ciao' as an informal way of saying goodbye to someone who they expect to see again soon. = see you. Word History: Ciao first appears in English in 1929 in Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms, which is set in northeast Italy during World War I. It is likely that this is where Hemingway learned the word, for ciau in Venetian dialect means "servant, slave," and, as a casual greeting, "I am your servant." Ciau corresponds to standard Italian schiavo; both words come from Medieval Latin sclavus, "slave." A similar development took place with servus, the Classical Latin word for "slave," in southern Germany, Austria, Hungary, and Poland, where servus is used as a casual greeting like ciao. At the opposite end of the world, in Southeast Asia, one even sees words meaning "slave" or "your slave" that have developed into pronouns of the first person, again to indicate respect and humility. used to say goodbye (from schiavo )
Construction Industry Action Group
The utterance at meeting or parting used throughout the European Community
an acknowledgment that can be used to say hello or goodbye (aloha is Hawaiian and ciao is Italian)
1) Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office 2) Critical Infrastructure Assurance Officer
ciao for now
goodbye, see you later
ciao
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