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That matters for the goodbye article in particular, because the cultural register around departure in Chinese contexts is one of the parts of the language where outside reading is no substitute for sitting through a few hundred actual goodbyes. I will write what the literature and the speakers I have asked converge on, and flag the limits.\n\nThe position I want to land is the one this whole how-to-say cluster runs on: politeness vocabulary is the most culturally loaded vocabulary in any language, and the gap between the Western politeness model and the Chinese politeness model is wider than the gap between, say, Spanish and French. Western politeness leans on tags (\"please\", \"thank you\", \"see you\"). Chinese politeness leans on relationship signalling: the formal nin, the host-guest ritual, the acknowledgement of the imposition, the reserved physical register. Zai jian on its own is correct and bloodless. Native goodbyes layer the relationship into the parting (the time-bound jian phrase, the bao zhong for someone you genuinely care about, the nin man zou from host to departing guest, the liu bu back).\n\nThe single highest-leverage move for a Western learner is to stop translating English goodbyes into Mandarin and start picking up Mandarin departure habits as their own shape. Bai bai is the casual default among urban speakers. Wo zou le is what you actually say when leaving a room. The nin man zou exchange is what genuine politeness looks like with elders and hosts. Treating those as the spine, and zai jian as the safe but slightly stiff fallback, gets you closer to the register native speakers actually use than any amount of textbook drilling on zai jian alone.\n",{"type":41,"value":42,"toc":997},"minimark",[43,48,61,66,72,75,91,97,111,124,128,131,228,232,235,238,241,244,247,251,254,358,373,377,380,384,410,414,428,432,446,450,464,468,533,542,546,549,630,641,645,648,673,676,680,684,706,710,732,736,753,757,774,778,870,874,877,897,900,904,907,944,948],[44,45,47],"h1",{"id":46},"how-to-say-goodbye-in-mandarin","How to Say Goodbye in Mandarin",[49,50,51,52,56,57,60],"p",{},"The textbook answer is ",[53,54,55],"strong",{},"zai jian"," (再见) - \"goodbye\" (literally \"see again\"). It works in any context. But the everyday Mandarin departure register is broader than the single phrase: the casual English-loan ",[53,58,59],{},"bai bai"," dominates informal goodbyes, time-bounded \"see you tomorrow\" phrases are common, and the formal written register has its own conventions. This article covers the standard goodbye, the casual variants, the time-bounded phrases, the regional differences, and how to choose the right phrase for the situation.",[62,63,65],"h2",{"id":64},"the-basic-goodbye","The basic goodbye",[49,67,68,71],{},[53,69,70],{},"Zai jian"," (再见) - \"goodbye\" (literally \"again-see\").",[49,73,74],{},"The pronunciation:",[76,77,78,85],"ul",{},[79,80,81,84],"li",{},[53,82,83],{},"Zai4"," (zai, fourth tone) - sharp falling.",[79,86,87,90],{},[53,88,89],{},"Jian4"," (jian, fourth tone) - sharp falling.",[49,92,93,94,96],{},"Use ",[53,95,55],{}," for:",[76,98,99,102,105,108],{},[79,100,101],{},"Any neutral or formal goodbye.",[79,103,104],{},"Leaving a shop, restaurant, taxi, or service interaction.",[79,106,107],{},"Saying goodbye to anyone you have just met or are addressing formally.",[79,109,110],{},"The universal safe default in any Mandarin context.",[49,112,113,115,116,119,120,123],{},[53,114,70],{}," is the everyday standard, equivalent to French ",[53,117,118],{},"au revoir"," rather than to Spanish ",[53,121,122],{},"adios"," which carries more finality.",[62,125,127],{"id":126},"casual-goodbyes","Casual goodbyes",[49,129,130],{},"The most common casual Mandarin goodbye is genuinely an English loanword:",[132,133,134,150],"table",{},[135,136,137],"thead",{},[138,139,140,144,147],"tr",{},[141,142,143],"th",{},"Casual phrase",[141,145,146],{},"Translation",[141,148,149],{},"Where used",[151,152,153,165,176,186,197,207,217],"tbody",{},[138,154,155,159,162],{},[156,157,158],"td",{},"Bai bai (拜拜)",[156,160,161],{},"Bye bye",[156,163,164],{},"Universal casual",[138,166,167,170,173],{},[156,168,169],{},"Bai (拜)",[156,171,172],{},"Bye",[156,174,175],{},"Casual shortened",[138,177,178,181,183],{},[156,179,180],{},"Hi! Bye!",[156,182,180],{},[156,184,185],{},"Younger urban speakers",[138,187,188,191,194],{},[156,189,190],{},"Zou le (走了)",[156,192,193],{},"(I am) going",[156,195,196],{},"Casual peer departure",[138,198,199,202,205],{},[156,200,201],{},"Wo zou le (我走了)",[156,203,204],{},"I am going",[156,206,196],{},[138,208,209,212,215],{},[156,210,211],{},"Xian zou yi bu (先走一步)",[156,213,214],{},"Going one step first",[156,216,196],{},[138,218,219,222,225],{},[156,220,221],{},"Hao de, zai jian (好的, 再见)",[156,223,224],{},"Okay, goodbye",[156,226,227],{},"Universal everyday",[229,230,158],"h3",{"id":231},"bai-bai-拜拜",[49,233,234],{},"The English-borrowed casual goodbye that dominates everyday Mandarin departures. The characters 拜拜 are Chinese (literally \"worship-worship\") but the pronunciation and usage come directly from English \"bye-bye.\" Universally used across all Mandarin-speaking regions; appropriate for friends, casual peers, and informal contexts. Not appropriate for formal contexts.",[229,236,190],{"id":237},"zou-le-走了",[49,239,240],{},"Literally \"going\" or \"leaving.\" Used as a casual departure announcement: \"I am off.\" Often appears as \"wo zou le\" (I am off). Common in workplace and peer contexts when you are physically leaving.",[229,242,211],{"id":243},"xian-zou-yi-bu-先走一步",[49,245,246],{},"Literally \"go one step first.\" Used when you are leaving before the others - \"I am heading off first.\" Polite casual phrase that acknowledges leaving the group.",[62,248,250],{"id":249},"time-bounded-goodbyes","Time-bounded goodbyes",[49,252,253],{},"Mandarin has time-bounded goodbye phrases parallel to English \"see you tomorrow\":",[132,255,256,268],{},[135,257,258],{},[138,259,260,263,266],{},[141,261,262],{},"Phrase",[141,264,265],{},"Characters",[141,267,146],{},[151,269,270,281,292,303,314,325,336,347],{},[138,271,272,275,278],{},[156,273,274],{},"Ming tian jian",[156,276,277],{},"明天见",[156,279,280],{},"See you tomorrow",[138,282,283,286,289],{},[156,284,285],{},"Yi hui er jian",[156,287,288],{},"一会儿见",[156,290,291],{},"See you in a bit",[138,293,294,297,300],{},[156,295,296],{},"Dai hui jian",[156,298,299],{},"待会见",[156,301,302],{},"See you later (Taiwan variant)",[138,304,305,308,311],{},[156,306,307],{},"Hou tian jian",[156,309,310],{},"后天见",[156,312,313],{},"See you the day after tomorrow",[138,315,316,319,322],{},[156,317,318],{},"Xia ci jian",[156,320,321],{},"下次见",[156,323,324],{},"See you next time",[138,326,327,330,333],{},[156,328,329],{},"Xing qi yi jian",[156,331,332],{},"星期一见",[156,334,335],{},"See you on Monday",[138,337,338,341,344],{},[156,339,340],{},"Wan shang jian",[156,342,343],{},"晚上见",[156,345,346],{},"See you tonight",[138,348,349,352,355],{},[156,350,351],{},"Yi hou jian",[156,353,354],{},"以后见",[156,356,357],{},"See you later (vaguer)",[49,359,360,361,368,369,372],{},"The pattern: ",[53,362,363,367],{},[364,365,366],"span",{},"time reference"," + jian"," (see). Universal and productive - you can construct any time-bounded goodbye by combining the time word with ",[53,370,371],{},"jian",".",[62,374,376],{"id":375},"special-parting-phrases","Special parting phrases",[49,378,379],{},"Mandarin has specific phrases for particular departure contexts:",[229,381,383],{"id":382},"when-someone-is-going-on-a-journey","When someone is going on a journey",[76,385,386,392,398,404],{},[79,387,388,391],{},[53,389,390],{},"Yi lu shun feng"," (一路顺风) - \"may the whole road have favourable wind\" - the formal good-journey wish.",[79,393,394,397],{},[53,395,396],{},"Yi lu ping an"," (一路平安) - \"may the whole road be peaceful\" - safe-journey wish.",[79,399,400,403],{},[53,401,402],{},"Zhu nin yi lu shun feng"," (祝您一路顺风) - \"I wish you favourable winds on your journey\" - formal.",[79,405,406,409],{},[53,407,408],{},"Lu shang xiao xin"," (路上小心) - \"be careful on the road\" - casual safe-travel wish.",[229,411,413],{"id":412},"when-someone-is-going-to-bed","When someone is going to bed",[76,415,416,422],{},[79,417,418,421],{},[53,419,420],{},"Wan an"," (晚安) - \"good night\" - the standard bedtime farewell.",[79,423,424,427],{},[53,425,426],{},"Zao dian shui"," (早点睡) - \"sleep early\" - caring casual wish.",[229,429,431],{"id":430},"when-parting-from-someone-older","When parting from someone older",[76,433,434,440],{},[79,435,436,439],{},[53,437,438],{},"Nin man zou"," (您慢走) - \"you walk slowly\" - the polite host-to-departing-guest phrase. The host (or younger person) says this to the departing person; the implication is \"do not rush, take your time.\"",[79,441,442,445],{},[53,443,444],{},"Lao ren jia bao zhong"," (老人家保重) - \"elderly one, take care\" - respectful elder-directed wish.",[229,447,449],{"id":448},"when-parting-at-the-end-of-a-meal","When parting at the end of a meal",[76,451,452,458],{},[79,453,454,457],{},[53,455,456],{},"Xie xie zhao dai"," (谢谢招待) - \"thanks for the hospitality\" - to the host.",[79,459,460,463],{},[53,461,462],{},"Wo men gai zou le"," (我们该走了) - \"we should be going\" - polite announcement of departure.",[62,465,467],{"id":466},"formal-versus-informal-goodbyes","Formal versus informal goodbyes",[132,469,470,483],{},[135,471,472],{},[138,473,474,477,480],{},[141,475,476],{},"Context",[141,478,479],{},"Formal",[141,481,482],{},"Informal",[151,484,485,495,505,515,524],{},[138,486,487,490,492],{},[156,488,489],{},"End of business meeting",[156,491,70],{},[156,493,494],{},"Hao de, zai jian \u002F Bai bai",[138,496,497,500,502],{},[156,498,499],{},"Leaving a shop",[156,501,70],{},[156,503,504],{},"Bai bai",[138,506,507,510,512],{},[156,508,509],{},"Parting with friends",[156,511,70],{},[156,513,514],{},"Bai bai \u002F Wo zou le",[138,516,517,520,522],{},[156,518,519],{},"Sending someone off on a journey",[156,521,390],{},[156,523,408],{},[138,525,526,529,531],{},[156,527,528],{},"Phone call sign-off",[156,530,70],{},[156,532,504],{},[49,534,535,536,538,539,541],{},"The Mandarin formal-informal distinction at goodbye is genuinely lighter than at greeting; ",[53,537,55],{}," works in both formal and informal contexts safely. ",[53,540,504],{}," is the explicit informal variant.",[62,543,545],{"id":544},"goodbye-in-writing","Goodbye in writing",[49,547,548],{},"Email and message sign-off conventions:",[132,550,551,562],{},[135,552,553],{},[138,554,555,558,560],{},[141,556,557],{},"Sign-off",[141,559,265],{},[141,561,476],{},[151,563,564,575,586,597,608,619],{},[138,565,566,569,572],{},[156,567,568],{},"Zhu hao (祝好)",[156,570,571],{},"祝好",[156,573,574],{},"\"Wish well\" - standard casual",[138,576,577,580,583],{},[156,578,579],{},"Shun zhu shi qi (顺祝时祺)",[156,581,582],{},"顺祝时祺",[156,584,585],{},"\"Wish seasonal good fortune\" - formal",[138,587,588,591,594],{},[156,589,590],{},"Zhi li (致礼)",[156,592,593],{},"致礼",[156,595,596],{},"\"Send regards\" - formal",[138,598,599,602,605],{},[156,600,601],{},"Ci zhi jing li (此致敬礼)",[156,603,604],{},"此致敬礼",[156,606,607],{},"\"Hereby send respectful regards\" - very formal",[138,609,610,613,616],{},[156,611,612],{},"An hao (安好)",[156,614,615],{},"安好",[156,617,618],{},"\"Peace and well-being\" - warm",[138,620,621,624,627],{},[156,622,623],{},"Wen hao (问好)",[156,625,626],{},"问好",[156,628,629],{},"\"Send greetings\" - friendly",[49,631,632,633,636,637,640],{},"The formal Chinese written sign-off is more elaborate than Western equivalents. Business emails to senior contacts use formal sign-offs (",[53,634,635],{},"ci zhi jing li","); casual workplace emails use lighter ones (",[53,638,639],{},"zhu hao",").",[62,642,644],{"id":643},"phone-call-goodbye","Phone call goodbye",[49,646,647],{},"When ending a Mandarin phone call:",[76,649,650,656,661,667],{},[79,651,652,655],{},[53,653,654],{},"Hao de, zai jian"," - okay, goodbye (universal).",[79,657,658,660],{},[53,659,504],{}," - casual.",[79,662,663,666],{},[53,664,665],{},"Na xian zhe yang ba"," - \"okay then let's leave it at that\" - polite signing-off.",[79,668,669,672],{},[53,670,671],{},"Hao de, jiu zhe yang"," - \"okay, let's leave it at that\" - similar polite.",[49,674,675],{},"The Chinese phone-ending convention typically includes a brief acknowledgement phrase (\"okay then\") before the actual goodbye, rather than just dropping into \"goodbye\" immediately.",[62,677,679],{"id":678},"regional-variations","Regional variations",[229,681,683],{"id":682},"mainland-china-putonghua","Mainland China (Putonghua)",[76,685,686,694,699],{},[79,687,688,690,691,693],{},[53,689,70],{}," and ",[53,692,59],{}," are universal.",[79,695,696,698],{},[53,697,285],{}," (\"see you in a bit\") is common.",[79,700,701,702,705],{},"The formal ",[53,703,704],{},"nin man zou"," (\"walk slowly\") is observed in traditional contexts and with elders.",[229,707,709],{"id":708},"taiwan-guoyu","Taiwan (Guoyu)",[76,711,712,718,726,729],{},[79,713,714,690,716,693],{},[53,715,70],{},[53,717,59],{},[79,719,720,722,723,372],{},[53,721,296],{}," (\"see you later\") is more common than mainland ",[53,724,725],{},"yi hui er jian",[79,727,728],{},"Taiwan Mandarin uses traditional characters: 再見 (zai jian) and 拜拜 (bai bai) are the same words spelled in traditional script.",[79,730,731],{},"Taiwanese formal goodbye register is similar to mainland but slightly more elaborate in polite contexts.",[229,733,735],{"id":734},"singapore-huayu","Singapore (Huayu)",[76,737,738,743,747,750],{},[79,739,740,742],{},[53,741,70],{}," is universal.",[79,744,745,742],{},[53,746,504],{},[79,748,749],{},"Code-switching with English (\"bye\", \"see you\") is extremely common in casual contexts.",[79,751,752],{},"Singapore Mandarin uses simplified characters as in mainland China.",[229,754,756],{"id":755},"hong-kong","Hong Kong",[76,758,759,769],{},[79,760,761,762,764,765,768],{},"Hong Kong operates primarily in Cantonese. The Mandarin ",[53,763,55],{}," is understood but the local Cantonese ",[53,766,767],{},"joi gin"," (再見) is the local idiomatic goodbye.",[79,770,771,773],{},[53,772,504],{}," is universal in Hong Kong casual contexts (in both Cantonese and Mandarin).",[62,775,777],{"id":776},"a-few-useful-related-phrases","A few useful related phrases",[132,779,780,791],{},[135,781,782],{},[138,783,784,786,788],{},[141,785,262],{},[141,787,265],{},[141,789,790],{},"Meaning",[151,792,793,804,815,826,837,848,859],{},[138,794,795,798,801],{},[156,796,797],{},"Bao zhong (保重)",[156,799,800],{},"保重",[156,802,803],{},"Take care",[138,805,806,809,812],{},[156,807,808],{},"Duo bao zhong (多保重)",[156,810,811],{},"多保重",[156,813,814],{},"Take great care",[138,816,817,820,823],{},[156,818,819],{},"Yi qie shun li (一切顺利)",[156,821,822],{},"一切顺利",[156,824,825],{},"May everything go smoothly",[138,827,828,831,834],{},[156,829,830],{},"Wan shi ru yi (万事如意)",[156,832,833],{},"万事如意",[156,835,836],{},"May all things go as you wish",[138,838,839,842,845],{},[156,840,841],{},"Zhu hao yun (祝好运)",[156,843,844],{},"祝好运",[156,846,847],{},"Wishing good luck",[138,849,850,853,856],{},[156,851,852],{},"Bao chi lian xi (保持联系)",[156,854,855],{},"保持联系",[156,857,858],{},"Keep in touch",[138,860,861,864,867],{},[156,862,863],{},"Hou hui you qi (后会有期)",[156,865,866],{},"后会有期",[156,868,869],{},"We will meet again (formal \u002F poetic)",[62,871,873],{"id":872},"the-handshake-or-nod-at-parting","The handshake or nod at parting",[49,875,876],{},"Mandarin Chinese culture does not have a cheek-kiss greeting\u002Fparting convention. Physical parting conventions:",[76,878,879,885,891],{},[79,880,881,884],{},[53,882,883],{},"Handshake"," - standard in business contexts.",[79,886,887,890],{},[53,888,889],{},"Slight nod \u002F head bow"," - in casual encounters and traditional contexts.",[79,892,893,896],{},[53,894,895],{},"No physical contact"," - increasingly common, especially post-Covid.",[49,898,899],{},"The Chinese physical-greeting register is more reserved than Mediterranean or Latin American conventions; visitors should not initiate cheek-kisses or hugs.",[62,901,903],{"id":902},"how-to-actually-internalise-these","How to actually internalise these",[49,905,906],{},"Three practical recommendations:",[908,909,910,925,931],"ol",{},[79,911,912,915,916,918,919,921,922,924],{},[53,913,914],{},"Use bai bai as your everyday casual."," Foreign learners over-deploy ",[53,917,55],{}," for every goodbye. Native speakers use ",[53,920,59],{}," for casual departures and reserve ",[53,923,55],{}," for slightly more formal or neutral contexts. Both are correct; the casual register varies.",[79,926,927,930],{},[53,928,929],{},"Add the time-bounded specificity."," \"Ming tian jian\" when you will see them tomorrow; \"yi hui er jian\" when later today; \"xia ci jian\" when next time. The specificity makes the goodbye warmer.",[79,932,933,936,937,939,940,943],{},[53,934,935],{},"Master the polite host-guest convention."," When you are leaving and the host says ",[53,938,704],{}," (\"walk slowly\"), the response is ",[53,941,942],{},"liu bu"," (留步) - \"stay\" or \"do not see me out.\" This brief exchange demonstrates cultural fluency in traditional Chinese contexts.",[62,945,947],{"id":946},"cross-references","Cross-references",[76,949,950,959,966,973,980,987],{},[79,951,952,953,958],{},"The ",[954,955,957],"a",{"href":956},"\u002Fmandarin","Mandarin for adult learners pillar"," covers the wider Mandarin learning approach.",[79,960,952,961,965],{},[954,962,964],{"href":963},"\u002Fresources\u002Fhow-to-say-hello-in-mandarin","how to say hello in Mandarin article"," covers the greeting register that pairs with goodbyes.",[79,967,952,968,972],{},[954,969,971],{"href":970},"\u002Fresources\u002Fhow-to-say-thank-you-in-mandarin","how to say thank you in Mandarin article"," covers the gratitude vocabulary that often appears in departure phrases.",[79,974,952,975,979],{},[954,976,978],{"href":977},"\u002Fresources\u002Fhow-to-say-sorry-in-mandarin","how to say sorry in Mandarin article"," covers the apology register.",[79,981,952,982,986],{},[954,983,985],{"href":984},"\u002Fmandarin\u002Faccents","Mandarin variety guide"," covers the regional variety choice in detail.",[79,988,952,989,993,994,996],{},[954,990,992],{"href":991},"\u002Ftools\u002Fmandarin-tones","Mandarin tone trainer"," provides the tone-discrimination practice needed for ",[53,995,55],{},"'s two fourth tones.",{"title":998,"searchDepth":999,"depth":999,"links":1000},"",2,[1001,1002,1008,1009,1015,1016,1017,1018,1024,1025,1026,1027],{"id":64,"depth":999,"text":65},{"id":126,"depth":999,"text":127,"children":1003},[1004,1006,1007],{"id":231,"depth":1005,"text":158},3,{"id":237,"depth":1005,"text":190},{"id":243,"depth":1005,"text":211},{"id":249,"depth":999,"text":250},{"id":375,"depth":999,"text":376,"children":1010},[1011,1012,1013,1014],{"id":382,"depth":1005,"text":383},{"id":412,"depth":1005,"text":413},{"id":430,"depth":1005,"text":431},{"id":448,"depth":1005,"text":449},{"id":466,"depth":999,"text":467},{"id":544,"depth":999,"text":545},{"id":643,"depth":999,"text":644},{"id":678,"depth":999,"text":679,"children":1019},[1020,1021,1022,1023],{"id":682,"depth":1005,"text":683},{"id":708,"depth":1005,"text":709},{"id":734,"depth":1005,"text":735},{"id":755,"depth":1005,"text":756},{"id":776,"depth":999,"text":777},{"id":872,"depth":999,"text":873},{"id":902,"depth":999,"text":903},{"id":946,"depth":999,"text":947},"Methodology",null,"2026-06-05T00:00:00+00:00","How to say goodbye in Mandarin Chinese. Zai jian, bai bai, time-bounded goodbyes, formal sign-offs, and regional variations across mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore.","md",[1034,1037,1040,1043],{"q":1035,"a":1036},"Is bai bai really how Chinese people say goodbye, or is it just for tourists?","Bai bai is a genuine everyday Mandarin goodbye used universally across mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore in casual contexts. It originated as an English loan but the characters and usage are now thoroughly nativised. Native speakers use it constantly with friends, peers and in informal service interactions. Zai jian is the safer formal default but bai bai is not a learner crutch.",{"q":1038,"a":1039},"What is the difference between zai jian and bai bai?","Zai jian (literally see again) is the neutral universal goodbye that works in every context including formal business and customer service. Bai bai is the casual everyday goodbye reserved for friends, peers and informal situations. Both are correct; the register differs. Foreign learners often overuse zai jian and miss that bai bai is what natives actually say in most relaxed contexts.",{"q":1041,"a":1042},"How do I say goodbye politely to someone older in Chinese?","The traditional host-to-guest formula is nin man zou (walk slowly), said by the older person or host to the departing guest. The departing guest replies with liu bu (stay, no need to see me out). Using nin (the formal you) throughout signals respect. Bao zhong (take care) or duo bao zhong is a warm and appropriate elder-directed sign-off.",{"q":1044,"a":1045},"Do you bow or shake hands when saying goodbye in China?","Chinese culture does not have a bow-based parting tradition like Japan or Korea. The default in business contexts is a handshake; in casual encounters a slight nod or no physical contact at all is normal, especially post-Covid. Cheek kisses and hugs are not standard and visitors should not initiate them. The reserved register reads as polite, not cold.",{},"\u002Fresources\u002Fmandarin\u002Fhow-to-say-goodbye-in-mandarin",{"title":37,"description":1031},"resources\u002Fmandarin\u002Fhow-to-say-goodbye-in-mandarin",[1051,1052,1053,1054],"mandarin phrases","mandarin vocabulary","chinese for beginners","goodbye","Zai jian is the textbook universal but bai bai dominates everyday casual goodbyes, time-bounded jian phrases (ming tian jian, yi hui er jian) carry the warmth, and the traditional nin man zou \u002F liu bu host-guest exchange is the marker of cultural fluency Western learners almost always miss.","xaVVC-hoQ6huM-4BIR0glDFddDj89w1J5oWkl9qCHHs",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":1058},"\u003Cg fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\">\u003Cpath d=\"M15 12h-5m5-4h-5m9 9V5a2 2 0 0 0-2-2H4\"\u002F>\u003Cpath d=\"M8 21h12a2 2 0 0 0 2-2v-1a1 1 0 0 0-1-1H11a1 1 0 0 0-1 1v1a2 2 0 1 1-4 0V5a2 2 0 1 0-4 0v2a1 1 0 0 0 1 1h3\"\u002F>\u003C\u002Fg>",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":1060},"\u003Cg fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\">\u003Cpath d=\"M12 15V3m9 12v4a2 2 0 0 1-2 2H5a2 2 0 0 1-2-2v-4\"\u002F>\u003Cpath d=\"m7 10l5 5l5-5\"\u002F>\u003C\u002Fg>",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":1062},"\u003Cpath fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\" d=\"M13 21h8M15 5l4 4m2.174-2.188a1 1 0 0 0-3.986-3.987L3.842 16.174a2 2 0 0 0-.5.83l-1.321 4.352a.5.5 0 0 0 .623.622l4.353-1.32a2 2 0 0 0 .83-.497z\"\u002F>",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":1064},"\u003Cg fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\">\u003Crect width=\"18\" height=\"18\" x=\"3\" y=\"3\" rx=\"2\" ry=\"2\"\u002F>\u003Ccircle cx=\"9\" cy=\"9\" r=\"2\"\u002F>\u003Cpath d=\"m21 15l-3.086-3.086a2 2 0 0 0-2.828 0L6 21\"\u002F>\u003C\u002Fg>",{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":1066},"\u003Cg fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" stroke-width=\"2\">\u003Cpath d=\"M6 22a2 2 0 0 1-2-2V4a2 2 0 0 1 2-2h8a2.4 2.4 0 0 1 1.704.706l3.588 3.588A2.4 2.4 0 0 1 20 8v12a2 2 0 0 1-2 2z\"\u002F>\u003Cpath d=\"M14 2v5a1 1 0 0 0 1 1h5M10 9H8m8 4H8m8 4H8\"\u002F>\u003C\u002Fg>",1781519466033]