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noonoi
What does "bid 'em a bon voyage" mean?
I heard it from the gangster movie.
one of the main characters named John said :
"Steve used to take his associates out there... bid 'em a bon voyage."
Does this means Steve used to take his coworkers out to that place and wish them have a safe journey?
Please kindly advise.
Many thanks in advance.
Nov 24, 2022 4:17 PM
Answers · 7
2
If you read the statement literally, then it does mean to wish someone a good journey. However, in the context of a gangster movie, it might mean that Steve sent his associates off on a trip from which they would not return (i.e., executed them). I suppose that might be considered an idiom in gangster culture?
November 24, 2022
1
I agree with Darren. Literally, it means to wish them safe travels or a good trip, but in the context of a gangster movie, it probably means he gave them a 'last goodbye' aka, he killed them. Gangsters in movies usually use a lot of coded language/slang and don't directly say what they mean since they need to be secretive.
November 29, 2022
Invitee
1
It means safe travels/goodbye to someone about who is about to take a trip.
November 24, 2022
1
Yea, that’s exactly what it means, bon voyage is French for “good travels or safe travels”
November 24, 2022
@Zukhanye and @Bethy
Thank you so much for your help!
I really appreciate it!
November 24, 2022
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noonoi
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, Japanese (Okinawan), Korean, Thai
Learning Language
English
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