Cheerio, David, and I am very grateful for your and your point.
From the blogs.psychcentral.com
Thanks for all your emails along the way, and for now, cheerio.
From the guardian.co.uk
Different strokes for different folks, pip pip, cheerio.
From the techcrunch.com
Thanks for your emails and company and, for now, cheerio.
From the guardian.co.uk
For now, cheerio and thanks for following.
From the sportsillustrated.cnn.com
Cheerio Geordie, bed time for this Grumpy Owd Git.
From the news.uk.msn.com
Cheerio Meite, your purple patch is over.
From the expressandstar.com
We'll be back next Wednesday, so for now, cheerio.
From the guardian.co.uk
For now, thanks for reading and cheerio.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
Adieu: a farewell remark; "they said their good-byes"
Cheerios is a brand of breakfast cereal by General Mills introduced on May 1, 1941 as the first oat-based, ready-to-eat cold cereal. Originally named CheeriOats, the name was changed to Cheerios in 1946 because of a trade name dispute with Quaker Oats. ...
A greeting or parting
(Cheerios) A toroidal toasted oat cereal made by General Mills
Goodbye! "Cheerio, luv. Thanks for having us."
Good-bye; farewell; offering good wishes when leave taking
(chiefly British) usually used as a farewell.
Cocktail sausage (this is a Queenslander thing. Tell a Melbournian you like Cheerios, and they will probably say goodbye and leave.)
Is a friendly way to say goodbye. 'Toodlepip' may be heard in use occasionally by the upper crust, nobs, sloany ponies, willies or prats (all derogatory terms for the upwardly mobile set). Cheers is also a friendly ways to say thank-you.