badbye

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English

Etymology

From bad +‎ bye, by analogy with goodbye, reanalyzed as good +‎ bye.

Interjection

badbye

  1. (colloquial, humorous, childish) Said in reaction to a departure involving painful emotions.
    • 2010, Stephen Dixon, What Is All This?: Uncollected Stories, Fantagraphics Books, →ISBN, page 534:
      Goodbye. / Then I don’t know what’s so good about it. / Then badbye or just bye. / Yes, that’s probably just a goodbye. / Bye, then? / I wish we didn’t have to say bye. / We didn’t say bye. / We said “badbye” and “just bye” and “then bye.”
    • 2019, Ray Robinson, The Mating Habits of Stags, Lightning Books, →ISBN:
      The distant thump of the front door. Gone. She didn’t even go to the window to watch him walk away. / And I cannot let you in. / What kind of a woman falls for a grieving man? / Badbye.
    1. Used to express sadness at the departure of a friend or loved one.
    2. Used to dismiss someone whom the speaker is angry with, such that the speaker may be happy to see them leave.
      Synonym: good riddance
      • 1976, Violet Weingarten, Half a Marriage, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, →ISBN, page 110:
        Once, when she was little, she was angry at Jason because he was going away and she refused to say goodbye to him. Instead she ran to a window and shouted after him, “Badbye, Daddy, badbye!”

Noun

badbye (plural badbyes)

  1. The acknowledgement of a departure involving such negative emotions.
    • 2009, Onyeka Nwelue, The Abyssinian Boy, DADA Books, →ISBN, page 112:
      She walked to the railing where airport people, who waited to wave goodbyes (and even badbyes) to their loved (and hated) ones, leaned.
    • 2017, Antoon A. Leenaars, The Psychological Autopsy, Routledge, →ISBN, page 184:
      I remember saying goodbye to all of my friends. But, I was telling lies, it wasn’t a goodbye at all, it was a badbye.
    • 2019, Ray Robinson, The Mating Habits of Stags, Lightning Books, →ISBN:
      Her last words to him: Don’t hurt anyone else. But did she mean: Don’t hurt me. / That wasn’t a goodbye. It was a badbye.

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