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Hello and Goodbye (Russian: Здравствуй и прощай) is a 1972 Soviet romantic comedy film directed by Vitaliy Melnikov. [1] [2] [3] The film tells about a woman who leaves her husband, having left for the city in search of the meaning of life. She meets a policeman whom she has fallen in love with and suddenly her husband returns. [4]
Another, less formal, possibility for "hello" in Russian is привет privet (stress on the second syllable, pri-VYET), which is easier for English speakers to pronounce. Wiktionary has translations of "hello" and "goodbye" into dozens of languages, see wikt:hello and wikt:goodbye.
Hello and Goodbye (1972 film) Hello, I'm Your Aunt! Hitler: A Film from Germany; Hopelessly Lost; Hot Snow (film) How Czar Peter the Great Married Off His Moor; How Ivanushka the Fool Travelled in Search of Wonder; A Hunting Accident
Hello and Goodbye: Здравствуй и прощай ... Russian Field: Русское поле ...
Hello and Goodbye may refer to: Hello & Goodbye, album by Jump5; Hello-Goodbye, light comedy film. Hello and Goodbye, Soviet comedy film. Hello and Goodbye (play), 1965 play by Athol Fugard. "Hello and Goodbye", an episode of L.A. Law "Hello and Goodbye", a song in the musical Evita
Ciao (/ tʃ aʊ / CHOW, Italian: ⓘ) is an informal salutation in the Italian language that is used for both "hello" and "goodbye".. Originally from the Venetian language, it has entered the vocabulary of English and of many other languages around the world.
Signifies a sign of respect, but is becoming less popular), "Kezét csókolom" (I kiss your hand, a polite greeting used by men when addressing women), "Szevasz" or "Szervusz" (a form of Servus, it is a casual greeting and a good-bye) "Hello" (Hello!, this greeting is becoming more popular but most often it is actually used to say good-bye)
In 1972 Natalya Gundareva debuted on the big screen with the leading role in Vitaly Melnikov's 'rural comedy' Hello and Goodbye. Her first success came with Vladimir Fetin 's melodrama Sweet Woman (1977) where she played Anya Dobrokhotova, although in retrospect two of her earlier performances, in Andrey Smirnov 's Autumn (1975) and Nikolai ...