Sens de See you
A casual farewell indicating future meeting.
In simple words: I will meet you again later.
See you dans une phrase
- I have to go now, but I'll see you later!
- Thanks for coming to the party. See you next time!
- Don't forget our meeting tomorrow; see you then!
Comment utiliser See you
Used when parting; appropriate in most situations. Can be too casual for formal settings.
Grammar pattern
standalone greeting
Memory hint
Think of seeing someone wave goodbye, then saying 'see you' as you part.
Mots liés
Collocations with See you
- see you later
- see you soon
- see you next time
Common mistakes with See you
- Saying 'see you tomorrow' when it's not clear you'll meet again.
- Using it in a formal email or letter.
- Confused with 'goodbye' which is more final.
See you appears in
See you dans d'autres langues
More chunks like See you
Les gens recherchent aussi
- See you signification
- que veut dire See you
- signification de See you
- See you traduction
- See you en français
- définition de See you
Questions fréquentes sur "See you"
Que signifie "See you"?
I will meet you again later.
Quelle est la définition de "See you"?
A casual farewell indicating future meeting.
Comment utiliser "See you" dans une phrase?
I have to go now, but I'll see you later!
Peux-tu donner un autre exemple de "See you"?
Thanks for coming to the party. See you next time!
Quels sont les synonymes de "See you"?
Quelques alternatives courantes : goodbye, later, take care, catch you later.
Quel est le contraire de "See you"?
Les sens opposés incluent Goodbye, Farewell, Take care.
Quels mots vont avec "See you"?
Il s'associe souvent à see you later, see you soon, see you next time.
Quelles sont les erreurs courantes avec "See you"?
Saying 'see you tomorrow' when it's not clear you'll meet again. Using it in a formal email or letter. Confused with 'goodbye' which is more final.
Comment prononce-t-on "See you"?
US: //si ju//, UK: //siː juː//. Écoute l'audio ci-dessus pour entendre la prononciation native.
Quand dois-je utiliser "See you"?
Used when parting; appropriate in most situations. Can be too casual for formal settings.





























