← Back to Skills Marketplace
wscats

bye

by enoyao · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
116
Downloads
0
Stars
0
Active Installs
2
Versions
Install in OpenClaw
/install bye
Description
A comprehensive skill about "Bye" and farewells — exploring the rich history, etymology, cultural traditions, psychology, and art of saying goodbye across th...
README (SKILL.md)

Bye Skill

Overview

This skill provides comprehensive knowledge about "Bye" — one of the most emotionally charged and universally practiced acts of human communication. From a simple wave to an elaborate ceremony, saying goodbye is a fundamental part of the human experience. Whether it's a casual "bye" at the end of a phone call, a tearful farewell at an airport, or a solemn "goodbye" at life's final moments, the act of parting carries deep linguistic, cultural, and psychological significance.

Origin & Etymology

"Goodbye" — A Contraction of "God Be with You"

The word "goodbye" has a surprisingly spiritual origin:

  • Original Form: "God be with ye" (late 14th century)
  • Evolution Path: God be with ye → Godbwye → God b'wy → God buy'ye → Good-bye → Goodbye → Bye
  • First Recorded Use: The earliest known written form appears in a 1573 letter by English scholar Gabriel Harvey, written as "God be wy you."
  • Influence of "Good": Over time, "God" was gradually replaced by "Good" (influenced by phrases like "good day" and "good night"), leading to the modern spelling "goodbye".

"Bye" — The Casual Shortening

  • "Bye" emerged as a clipped form of "goodbye" in the early 18th century.
  • "Bye-bye" appeared as a nursery/childish reduplication, first recorded around 1709.
  • Today, "bye" is the dominant casual farewell in English, used far more frequently than the full "goodbye."

Related Etymology

Word Origin Meaning
Farewell Middle English "faren wel" "May you journey well"
Adieu Old French "a Dieu" "To God" (I commend you)
Adios Spanish "a Dios" "To God"
Sayonara Japanese "左様なら" "If it must be so"
Ciao Italian (Venetian "s-ciào") Originally "I am your slave/servant"
Vale Latin "valē" "Be strong / Be well"
Shalom Hebrew "שָׁלוֹם" "Peace"
Aloha Hawaiian "Love / Compassion" (used for both hello and goodbye)

Ways to Say Goodbye Around the World

Formal & Informal Farewells by Language

Language Formal Informal Literal Meaning
🇬🇧 English Goodbye / Farewell Bye / See ya / Later "God be with you"
🇫🇷 French Au revoir Salut / À plus "Until we see again"
🇩🇪 German Auf Wiedersehen Tschüss / Ciao "Until we see again"
🇪🇸 Spanish Adiós / Hasta luego Chao / Nos vemos "To God" / "Until later"
🇮🇹 Italian Arrivederci Ciao "Until we see each other"
🇵🇹 Portuguese Adeus / Até logo Tchau "To God" / "Until soon"
🇯🇵 Japanese さようなら (Sayōnara) じゃあね (Jā ne) / バイバイ (Bai bai) "If it must be so"
🇰🇷 Korean 안녕히 가세요 (Annyeonghi gaseyo) 잘 가 (Jal ga) / 바이바이 (Bai bai) "Go in peace"
🇨🇳 Chinese 再见 (Zàijiàn) 拜拜 (Bái bái) / 回见 (Huí jiàn) "See again"
🇷🇺 Russian До свидания (Do svidaniya) Пока (Poka) "Until meeting"
🇮🇳 Hindi अलविदा (Alvida) फिर मिलेंगे (Phir milenge) "In God's care" / "We'll meet again"
🇸🇦 Arabic مع السلامة (Ma'a as-salāma) يلا باي (Yalla bye) "With peace/safety"
🇹🇷 Turkish Hoşça kalın Görüşürüz / Bay bay "Stay pleasantly"
🇳🇱 Dutch Tot ziens Doei / Dag "Until seeing"
🇸🇪 Swedish Adjö / Hej då Vi ses / Hejdå "To God" / "See you"
🇬🇷 Greek Αντίο (Antío) Γεια σου (Yia sou) "In place of God"
🇮🇱 Hebrew להתראות (Lehitraot) יאללה ביי (Yalla bye) "Until we see each other"
🇭🇺 Hungarian Viszontlátásra Szia / Viszlát "Until seeing again"
🇿🇦 Zulu Sala kahle / Hamba kahle Shap "Stay well" / "Go well"

Interesting Patterns

  • 🙏 Religious origins: Many farewells invoke God's protection (Goodbye, Adieu, Adios, Adjö)
  • 🔄 Promise of return: Many emphasize reunion (Au revoir, Auf Wiedersehen, 再见, До свидания)
  • ✌️ Wishing wellness: Some focus on the other's wellbeing (Farewell, Sala kahle, Vale)
  • 🤝 Dual-purpose words: Some words serve as both greeting and farewell (Aloha, Ciao, Shalom, Szia)

Cultural Farewell Traditions

🇯🇵 Japan — The Art of Bowing

In Japan, farewells are accompanied by bowing (お辞儀, ojigi). The depth and duration of the bow reflect the relationship and formality:

  • 15° bow (会釈, eshaku): Casual farewell to acquaintances
  • 30° bow (敬礼, keirei): Respectful farewell to superiors or clients
  • 45° bow (最敬礼, saikeirei): Deep farewell showing profound respect or gratitude

🇳🇿 New Zealand — The Hongi

The Māori people perform the hongi — pressing noses and foreheads together — as both a greeting and farewell, symbolizing the sharing of the breath of life (ha).

�� India — Namaste

The Namaste gesture (palms pressed together, slight bow) is used for both hello and goodbye, meaning "the divine in me bows to the divine in you."

�� Thailand — The Wai

The wai (pressing palms together near the chest or face with a slight bow) is Thailand's traditional farewell gesture, with the height of the hands indicating the level of respect.

🇹 Ethiopia — Extended Farewells

Ethiopian farewells can be elaborate affairs, often involving multiple rounds of goodbye, coffee ceremonies, and blessings. Leaving too quickly is considered rude.

🇲🇽 Mexico — Hugs and Kisses

Mexican farewells typically involve warm embraces (abrazos) and cheek kisses, even among casual acquaintances. A simple "bye" without physical contact may feel cold.

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Scotland — Auld Lang Syne

The Scottish tradition of singing "Auld Lang Syne" (by Robert Burns) at New Year's Eve and farewells has become a global phenomenon, symbolizing the bittersweet nature of parting.

The Psychology of Goodbye

Why Goodbyes Are Hard

  • 🧠 Loss Aversion: Humans are psychologically wired to feel losses more intensely than gains. Saying goodbye triggers the brain's loss-processing circuits.
  • 💔 Attachment Theory: John Bowlby's research shows that separation anxiety is a fundamental human response, rooted in our evolutionary need for social bonds.
  • 🕐 The Zeigarnik Effect: Unfinished goodbyes (things left unsaid) create persistent psychological tension.
  • 😢 Anticipatory Grief: The sadness of goodbye often begins before the actual parting.

The Five Stages of Farewell (Adapted from Kübler-Ross)

  1. Denial — "This isn't really happening."
  2. Bargaining — "Can we have just five more minutes?"
  3. Sadness — The emotional weight of separation.
  4. Acceptance — Coming to terms with the parting.
  5. Hope — "We'll meet again."

The Positive Side of Goodbye

  • Closure: Proper goodbyes provide emotional closure and reduce lingering regret.
  • 🌱 Growth: Every goodbye marks the beginning of something new.
  • 💝 Appreciation: Farewells remind us to value the people and moments in our lives.
  • 🔄 Renewal: The Japanese concept of "一期一会" (ichigo ichie) — "one time, one meeting" — teaches us that every encounter is unique and precious.

Famous Goodbyes in History

Year Event Quote / Detail
44 BC Julius Caesar's assassination "Et tu, Brute?" — "And you, Brutus?"
1796 George Washington's Farewell Address Warned against political factions and foreign entanglements
1863 Gettysburg Address Lincoln's farewell to the fallen: "that these dead shall not have died in vain"
1941 Casablanca (film, 1942) "Here's looking at you, kid."
1945 End of WWII Millions of soldiers' emotional homecomings and farewells
1961 Eisenhower's Farewell Address Warned of the "military-industrial complex"
1969 Apollo 11 departure "We came in peace for all mankind"
1977 Elvis Presley's last concert His final performance before his untimely death
1995 Toy Story "So long, partner." — Woody
1997 Princess Diana's funeral Elton John's "Candle in the Wind" farewell
2003 The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King "I will not say: do not weep; for not all tears are an evil." — Gandalf
2015 Obama's farewell speech "Yes we can. Yes we did."
2023 ChatGPT era Redefining how humans say "bye" to AI assistants

"Bye" in Literature & Art

Iconic Farewell Quotes

"Parting is such sweet sorrow, that I shall say good night till it be morrow." — William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

"Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened." — Often attributed to Dr. Seuss

"How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard." — A.A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh

"Every parting is a form of death, as every reunion is a type of heaven." — Tryon Edwards

"The pain of parting is nothing to the joy of meeting again." — Charles Dickens, Nicholas Nickleby

"人生若只如初见,何事秋风悲画扇。" — 纳兰性德 (Nalan Xingde), Qing Dynasty poet

Farewell Songs Through the Ages

Song Artist Year Notable Line
"Auld Lang Syne" Robert Burns 1788 "Should old acquaintance be forgot"
"Time to Say Goodbye" Andrea Bocelli & Sarah Brightman 1996 "Con te partirò"
"Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" Elton John 1973 "I should have stayed on the farm"
"See You Again" Wiz Khalifa ft. Charlie Puth 2015 "It's been a long day without you, my friend"
"Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)" Green Day 1997 "I hope you had the time of your life"
"Bye Bye Bye" *NSYNC 2000 "Don't wanna be a fool for you"
"Hello, Goodbye" The Beatles 1967 "You say goodbye and I say hello"
"Waving Flag" K'naan 2009 A farewell to hardship, hello to hope
"送别 (Farewell)" Li Shutong (弘一法师) 1915 "长亭外,古道边,芳草碧连天"

"Bye" in the Digital Age

How We Say Goodbye Online

Form Context Tone
"Bye" Standard Neutral, polite
"Bye!" Enthusiastic Friendly, warm
"Bye bye" Casual Playful, affectionate
"Byeee" Extended Flirty or extra-friendly
"bye." Period ending Can feel abrupt or cold
"gtg, bye" Texting Quick, informal
"ttyl" Texting "Talk to you later" — implies reconnection
"👋" Emoji Visual wave goodbye
"✌️" Emoji Cool, casual departure
"Peace out" Slang Relaxed, confident exit
"Deuces" Slang Casual, often accompanied by ✌️
"Signing off" Professional Formal digital farewell
"brb" Texting "Be right back" — temporary goodbye

The "Irish Goodbye" & Other Cultural Exit Styles

Style Description
Irish Goodbye Leaving a social gathering without saying goodbye to anyone
French Exit Same as Irish Goodbye (called "filer à l'anglaise" — "leave English-style" in French!)
Japanese Goodbye Multiple rounds of bowing and farewell phrases
Italian Goodbye Extended, emotional, with multiple hugs and "ciao ciao"
Midwestern Goodbye (USA) Saying "well, we should get going" then talking for another 30-45 minutes

Fun Facts

  • 🌍 Universal Act: Every known human culture has some form of farewell ritual — it is a true cultural universal.
  • 👋 The Wave: The waving gesture as a farewell is believed to have originated from showing an open, weaponless hand.
  • 📞 Phone Goodbye: Alexander Graham Bell wanted people to answer the phone with "Ahoy!" — Thomas Edison suggested "Hello", which won. But "Bye" became the universal phone sign-off.
  • 🚀 Space Farewells: Astronauts have a tradition of waving goodbye from the bus on the way to the launch pad.
  • "I'll be back": Arnold Schwarzenegger's famous line from The Terminator (1984) is technically a farewell — and one of the most quoted in cinema history.
  • 📊 Frequency: The average person says some form of "bye" approximately 8-10 times per day.
  • 🧬 Biological Response: Studies show that hugging during goodbyes releases oxytocin, reducing stress and strengthening social bonds.
  • 🐕 Animals Say Bye Too: Dogs exhibit farewell behaviors (whining, following to the door), and elephants have been observed performing farewell rituals for deceased members.
  • 🔁 Bye-Bye Paradox: In many languages, "bye-bye" (reduplication) is considered childish, yet it's used universally by adults in casual settings.
  • 🗓️ National Goodbye Day: Some communities celebrate informal "Goodbye Days" at the end of school years or military deployments.

The Philosophy of Goodbye

"Bye" is far more than a word — it is an acknowledgment of impermanence. Every goodbye carries within it the recognition that time moves forward, that moments are fleeting, and that human connections, however deep, exist within the flow of change.

The Buddhist concept of 無常 (mujō / wúcháng) — impermanence — teaches that all things are transient. Saying "bye" is, in its essence, an acceptance of this truth.

Yet within every goodbye lives a seed of hope. The French say "Au revoir" — until we see again. The Chinese say "再见" — see again. The German says "Auf Wiedersehen" — until seeing again. Across languages and cultures, humanity refuses to let goodbye be final.

"Every exit is an entry somewhere else." — Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead

Usage

Activate this skill to access detailed information about "Bye" and the art of farewell, including its etymology, cultural traditions worldwide, psychological insights, famous goodbyes in history, literary references, and digital-age farewell etiquette. Ideal for linguists, cultural enthusiasts, writers, travelers, and anyone fascinated by the deeply human act of saying goodbye.


Usage Guidance
This skill appears safe from a security/permission standpoint because it contains only static informational content and asks for no installs or credentials. Before installing, consider: (1) the SKILL.md claims an author and MIT license but the source/homepage is missing — if you care about provenance/trust, verify the publisher; (2) content accuracy and cultural sensitivity — the skill may contain simplifications or minor errors, so review before using in critical contexts; and (3) although the skill itself cannot access your files or secrets, any conversation you have with the agent while using the skill will be processed by the agent/model — avoid sharing sensitive personal data in prompts.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: bye Version: 1.0.0 The skill bundle 'bye' is a purely informational and educational resource focused on the etymology, cultural traditions, and psychology of farewells. Analysis of SKILL.md and _meta.json reveals no executable code, suspicious network requests, or prompt injection attempts designed to manipulate the AI agent's behavior.
Capability Tags
cryptocan-make-purchases
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The name and description match the SKILL.md content (linguistic/cultural material about farewells). The skill requests no binaries, credentials, or config paths — which is appropriate for an informational skill.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md is purely descriptive content about etymology, traditions, and usage; it does not instruct the agent to read local files, access environment variables, or call external endpoints beyond normal agent behavior.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files are present. As an instruction-only skill, nothing is written to disk or downloaded during installation.
Credentials
The skill requires no environment variables or credentials. There are no disproportionate secret requests or unrelated credential demands.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill is not marked always:true and uses default invocation settings. It does not request system-wide changes or elevated persistence.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install bye
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /bye
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release of the "Bye" skill. - Provides comprehensive information on the word "bye" and global farewell traditions. - Covers etymology, history, and evolution of "goodbye" and related words. - Includes ways to say goodbye in multiple languages, with cultural context. - Describes farewell customs in different regions and societies. - Explores the psychology of goodbyes and their emotional impact. - Highlights famous historical farewells and their significance.
v1.0.1
- Renamed and redefined the skill: Now focused on "OK," the world's most recognized word, with detailed info on its origin, etymology, usage, and cultural importance. - Added comprehensive etymology, including leading and alternative theories. - Expanded linguistic analysis: covers OK as adjective, adverb, verb, noun, interjection, and more. - Included global variations: spelling, usage in dozens of languages, and cultural notes about the OK gesture. - Introduced sections on OK in technology, programming, texting, and modern digital culture. - Enriched with historical milestones and fun facts about OK’s journey across centuries and platforms.
Metadata
Slug bye
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is bye?

A comprehensive skill about "Bye" and farewells — exploring the rich history, etymology, cultural traditions, psychology, and art of saying goodbye across th... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 116 downloads so far.

How do I install bye?

Run "/install bye" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is bye free?

Yes, bye is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does bye support?

bye is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created bye?

It is built and maintained by enoyao (@wscats); the current version is v1.0.0.

💬 Comments