Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    sayonara
    /ˌsʌɪəˈnɑːrə/

    exclamation

    • 1. goodbye: informal US "the beautiful Diana was twenty-one when she said sayonara"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Sayonara is a casual way to say goodbye, similar to phrases like "so long" or "see ya!" You might say sayonara to your traveling grandmother, or say sayonara to a terrible job at the end of a long summer.

  3. Sayonara is an interjection meaning farewell or goodbye in Japanese. It comes from a shortened form of sayō-naraba, which means "if it be thus". See how to use it in sentences and its history.

  4. noun. 1. a Japanese farewell. exclamation. 2. goodbye. Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. You may also like. COBUILD frequency band. sayonara in American English. (ˌsɑjɔˈnɑʀɑ) Japan. interjection, noun. goodbye; farewell. Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition.

  5. Sayonara is a Japanese word meaning farewell. It can be used as an interjection or a noun. Find out its origin, pronunciation, and other related words in this web page.

  6. 3 days ago · Sayonara is an interjection meaning goodbye or farewell, borrowed from Japanese. It can also be a noun for a type of footwear in Spanish and a colloquial term in Polish.

  7. Sayonara is a Japanese word that means goodbye or farewell. It is derived from the Middle Chinese jiang, which means thus or appearance.

  8. Origin of sayonara 1 First recorded in 1860–65; from Japanese sayō-nara, shortening of sayō-naraba, equivalent to sayō “thus” + naraba “if it be” Advertisement