How To Use Abroad In A Sentence

  • While the Irish government generates a lot of noisy, self-righteous cant about the evils of cigarettes at home, it makes a pretty packet from ‘selling death’ abroad.
  • Thousands have moved abroad in search of work but some had been happy to freeload at the family home. Times, Sunday Times
  • The devaluation of the pound will make British goods more competitive abroad.
  • Most employees get posted abroad at some stage.
  • Countless millions here and abroad will be hoping the Royal romance brings joy in dark economic times. The Sun
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • In the premise of quality assurance, product diversification, style fashion, and make our products sell well at home and abroad, and won the trust of our customers and highly praised.
  • I'm going to chuck it all in and go abroad.
  • The overall statistics include 185 progeny sired by North American stallions that were foaled abroad.
  • Dry bread at home is better than roast meat abroad
  • And then, they say, no spirit can walk abroad.
  • She let slip a chance to work abroad.
  • We can extend our insurance cover to travel abroad.
  • There seemed to my perverted sense a certain poetic justice about the fact that money, gained honestly but prosaically, in groceries or gas, should go to regild an ancient blazon or prop up the crumbling walls of some stately palace abroad. Worldly Ways and Byways
  • I would love to go abroad this year, perhaps to the South of France.
  • They could decide who got the promotion, the apartment, the new car, or the postgraduate course abroad. OUTCAST
  • Some of the country is like England, undulating, rolling, well-cultivated fields, enclosed with pailings which overlap each other and would be awkwardish obstacles in a hunting country; but one misses, like abroad, the cattle -- we saw one or two stray cows, but little else. A Lady's Life on a Farm in Manitoba
  • The amendments to the Armed Forces Act include a provision under which the contracts of the professional soldiers would include a paragraph for precursory agreement for participation in missions abroad.
  • If you are venturing further abroad, wild animals and insects can present a deadly danger and avoidance is usually the key. Times, Sunday Times
  • I had always been attracted by the idea of working abroad.
  • The couple sorted out their problems and moved abroad. The Sun
  • A car of comparable size would cost far more abroad.
  • Beijing has tightened controls on moving money abroad, with a limit of $50,000 a year. Times, Sunday Times
  • He arranged for several deaconesses to work abroad, not only in North America but also in Russia, Estonia, and Bessarabia.
  • Why should ordinary Koreans pay taxes for those shirkers who educate their children abroad and avoid military service duties?
  • She walked abroad daily in the Manor, and it was her custom to send me word whither she went, that Puck of Pook's Hill
  • All the indications are that we are going to receive reasonable support from abroad.
  • She seems fixed on going abroad for her holiday.
  • Their owner believes they were stolen for a private collector abroad.
  • By then he was unofficially resident and working abroad, and in uneasy relations with the Soviet authorities.
  • Let her go abroad and tell the world how primitive is the structure of our society.
  • If we could afford it, we'd like to go abroad for our holidays.
  • When a diabetic travels abroad, the customs sometimes take his syringe and he is suspected of being a narcotist.
  • When it came for picking teams for tours abroad they were ignored.
  • Eventually, faster-maturing, fine-fleeced Merinos replaced them, and the breed became nearly extinct, both here and abroad.
  • Traditionally, the attitude toward the motherland among Russian speakers abroad has been complex.
  • He developed the idea of Papal nuncios to represent the Church abroad.
  • The world's largest maker of ceramic packaging used to protect computer chips gets more than half of its sales from abroad.
  • Most companies today provide cross-cultural training only if an employee will be living abroad as part of an assignment.
  • It makes us so happy when audiences abroad applaud us so much. Times, Sunday Times
  • Early as it was, crowds of American, English, and Continental tourists were abroad, their gleaming white drill attire and tobies and helmets, conspicuous among the grander colour of the natives. The Mark of the Beast
  • Most importantly, any income earned abroad must stay abroad to be tax-free. Times, Sunday Times
  • When the travel company went bankrupt, many holidaymakers were left high and dry abroad or waiting at the airport.
  • My brother has never been abroad before, so he is finding this trip very exciting.
  • The goal of this policy is to systematize the connection between the scientists abroad and their home.
  • I had to choose between staying with my parents and going abroad.
  • In a written statement the Foreign Ministry said that the suggestion that the servicing terminal is abroad was false, and that in any case the satellite channels were used for relaying only non-classified information.
  • Instead, this money is being sent abroad to create jobs in nations that use low-cost labor.
  • He will be a dominant figure at home and abroad, whether he likes it or not.
  • This budget abandons all hope of reforming wasteful military procurement and distorts America's priorities at home and abroad.
  • The country from where most people emigrate is Morocco, which in 2005 had more then 3 million Moroccan citizens registered at the Moroccan consulates abroad. Archive 2008-01-01
  • They were domiciled abroad for tax purposes.
  • He was killed while on assignment abroad.
  • He found the media attention intolerable and went to ground abroad for several months.
  • Students have the option of studying abroad in their second year.
  • It makes us so happy when audiences abroad applaud us so much. Times, Sunday Times
  • But when these rants are offered abroad as legitimate criticisms of this country, it is a cultural crime.
  • What critics here and abroad are glossing over, however, is that as a political marketing device, his address was absolutely brilliant.
  • The band has performed at several concerts abroad and is at present recording its third album.
  • Mr Bush called soothingly for greater humility in projecting American power abroad ... Max Bergmann: John McCain "Laid the Groundwork" for George Bush's Post 9-11 Foreign Policy
  • Annual showcase from home and abroad, with a different selection at each performance. Times, Sunday Times
  • A massive exodus of doctors is forcing the government to recruit from abroad.
  • Last year we had 124 embassies abroad compared with 24 in 1990. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was born of German parents and lived most of his life abroad.
  • Witte spent most of his last years abroad, depressed and bitter, predicting doom. The Return
  • More important, the backlash against genetically modified foods is fading as new studies ease fears about the health and environmental effects of such crops, though serious obstacles still retard their potential abroad.
  • It is a dilemma facing tens of thousands of passengers this weekend as they are forced to pay for longer stays abroad. Times, Sunday Times
  • He or she will have to be capable of overhauling the economy, projecting French power abroad and keeping the country secure at home. Times, Sunday Times
  • When there is no recreation or business for thee abroad, thou may'st have a company of honest old fellows in their leathern jackets in thy study which will find thee excellent divertisement at home. The Guide to Reading — the Pocket University Volume XXIII
  • I shall decide for going abroad later.
  • Solid wimble nozzles are commonly used as flushing nozzles at home and abroad, and the uniformity of spray is one of the important indexes for the performance evaluation of a flushing nozzle.
  • The ruling stipulated that only diplomats and servicemen posted abroad will be allowed to vote, by mail.
  • Having never been abroad, she is considering where to go for her first trip overseas.
  • Who's minding the shop while the boss is abroad?
  • Indeed, one new report says that we will have to import painters and decorators from abroad by 2020 if trends continue.
  • Additionally, the stalemate over economic union makes it difficult to assess the costs of insurance or mortgages arranged abroad.
  • Many art exhibitions and cultural events were sent abroad.
  • Why should it expend men and treasure on the forlorn hope of supporting democracy abroad? Times, Sunday Times
  • She seems very much opposed to your going abroad.
  • The engineering doctor from abroad only broke in with us last month.
  • He said the lure of a better life abroad was tempting thousands of people into rickety boats. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rather call the dusky and dark-haired Twilight, whose pensive face is limned against the western hills, by the name of that fierce and fervid Noon that stands erect under the hot zenith, instinct with the red blood of a thousand summers, casting her glittering tresses abroad upon the south-wind, and holding in her hands the all-unfolded rose of life. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 16, February, 1859
  • Then did one of the Monstruwacans report that a new and terrible Influence was abroad in the Land; and by the instrument, we had knowledge that it approached; and some of the Monstruwacans called foolishly with weak voices to the Ten-thousand to haste; forgetting, and desiring only their safety from that which came near. The Night Land: Chapter 4
  • The riots did not originate from abroad, but were the product of internal discontent," heexplained, saying that unlike the huge police presence in the region, "restriction of communicatory freedoms would not prevent new riots. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • The vulgar always knew what General danced with the lovely Miss A., and how they looked, and what they said to each other; how many jewels Miss A. wore, and the material her dress was made of; they knew who polkaed with the accomplished Miss B., and how like a duchess she bore herself; they had the exact name of the colonel who dashed along so like a knight with the graceful and much-admired Mrs. D., whose husband was abroad serving his country; what gallant captain of dragoons (captains of infantry were looked upon as not what they might be) promenaded so imperiously with the vivacious Miss E.; and what distinguished foreigner sat all night in the corner holding a suspicious and very improper conversation with Miss An Outcast or, Virtue and Faith
  • Food aid from abroad must now make up for these lost harvests.
  • It was suggested that the guild hold an annual trip abroad each year and pay into a monthly kitty to finance the trip
  • The country was so poorly off it had to close many of its embassies abroad.
  • Removals An employee moving abroad is obviously concerned about the safe handling of personal possessions.
  • Even the old parliamentarians hailed the return of Charles, notwithstanding it was admitted that the protectorate was a vigorous administration; that law and order were enforced; that religious liberty was proclaimed; that the rights of conscience were respected; that literature and science were encouraged; that the morals of the people were purified; that the ordinances of religion were observed; that vice and folly were discouraged; that justice was ably administered; that peace and plenty were enjoyed; that prosperity attended the English arms abroad; and that the nation was as much respected abroad as it was prosperous at home. A Modern History, From the Time of Luther to the Fall of Napoleon For the Use of Schools and Colleges
  • Britain last year spent nearly £5000 million more on importing food than selling abroad.
  • Even a staunch admirer of Turner, the redoubtable art critic Brian Sewell wrote at the time the Tate was mounting its campaign to save The Blue Rigi painting from being sold abroad: This is just bloody silly. A legacy Turner would have approved of | Charles Saatchi
  • Not a soul was abroad that morning.
  • I can now afford a new car, holidays abroad and lots of other goodies.
  • Try to work for a global firm or company and work abroad as it is a great experience. Times, Sunday Times
  • But what can one expect from the unlicked cubs (pardon the term) sent abroad with only stature, to make them look like men, and equipage to attract respect, without one other qualification to enforce it? Pamela
  • Amateurs and semi-professionals do campaign work unless consultants are hired and brought from abroad.
  • The story here concerns a pair of American innocents abroad—Lightning McQueen, the bright-red race car brightly voiced by Owen Wilson, and Tow Mater, the buck-toothed, good-hearted tow truck who speaks in the cornpone tones of Larry the Cable Guy. Oy Story: 'Cars 2' Is a Dollar-Driven Edsel
  • Even when they are obliged to live abroad for years they refuse either to accustom themselves to foreign food or to learn foreign languages.
  • Whether he knew it, he was on course for a historic achievement, becoming only the seventh batsmen in Test cricket to score centuries both on their first appearance at home and on their debut abroad.
  • Annual showcase season of contemporary dance from home and abroad. Times, Sunday Times
  • The offer of a year abroad with all expenses paid seemed too good to miss.
  • A month later union leaders were drafted in following fears the firm's wood mill was facing imminent closure, with more finished products being shipped in from abroad.
  • A brain drain blighted the Labour governments of the 1970s, as high earners were driven abroad by penal income-tax rates.
  • This legend still spreads abroad among the people.
  • Continuously inspired by his travels abroad, the Atlanta resident also enjoys an audience when he is working.
  • Competition from abroad became fiercer in the 1990s.
  • Socially, the fabric is often as fragmented as the physical one, with immigrants from rural areas or from abroad mixed hugger-mugger with some of the least privileged traditional citizens.
  • There should be proper interviews of these people so that, like Zambians working abroad, they also can work here as long as they formalise their documents and stay away from activities that are inimical to national development.
  • A lion at home, a mouse abroad
  • Indeed, one new report says that we will have to import painters and decorators from abroad by 2020 if trends continue.
  • May the Lord graciously grant us this holy faith and the love for Christ that rises from it - a love that is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit, constraining us to lean on him alone.
  • He says the Telegraph ignored important reasons to suppose that the girl, or more likely her parents, were not innocents abroad but downloaders on a big scale.
  • I can now afford a new car, holidays abroad and lots of other goodies.
  • Pilgrimages to shrines and holy places at home and abroad attract tens of thousands of people each year.
  • The cost increases when stag and hen weekends take place abroad. Times, Sunday Times
  • His hatred of his father was the causa causans of the whole case; he had pushed Oscar into the fight and Oscar, still intent on shielding him, declared that he had asked him to go abroad. Oscar Wilde, His Life and Confessions
  • Such companies, the argument goes, exploit poor workers abroad and impoverish workers at home by moving capital overseas.
  • A revolt against a ruling liberal political class which has caused untold havoc at home and mayhem and murder abroad. The Sun
  • Over the past couple of years, some of the most visually arresting series have hailed from abroad. Times, Sunday Times
  • Meanwhile, the Czechoslovak government has allocated a budget to promote its position on the dam abroad.
  • This was partly because you were working abroad and your email service kept pushing emails from the DVLA into your spam folder. Times, Sunday Times
  • When I travel abroad I like to mix business with pleasure.
  • I had a friend who worked abroad minus his wife and ran off with a younger bird.
  • If I had assured her that she would be torn limb from limb, like an inconvincible aristocrat flaunting abroad during the early days of the French Revolution, she would have grown enthusiastic. The Mountebank
  • This barmy idea is policy of governments past and present but will put English gardeners at a disadvantage and export yet more horticulture jobs abroad. The Sun
  • Money sent home by Salvadorans abroad are the country's largest single source of foreign exchange - MoJo Blogs and Articles
  • You know what led me to spend the bulk of my early adult life abroad? Times, Sunday Times
  • Almost everyone had a family member or friend who had migrated and returned or continued to live abroad.
  • I shall decide for going abroad later.
  • He never travelled to any of the European capitals outside Vienna, and he lacked percipient champions who could both recognize his worth and noise his talents abroad.
  • His hatred of his father was the "causa causans" of the whole case; he had pushed Oscar into the fight and Oscar, still intent on shielding him, declared that he had asked him to go abroad. Oscar Wilde His Life and Confessions
  • All that was needed abroad or at home was to repeat the same sentence more slowly at a puzzled auslander, if that didn't work it was polite to bellow it repeatedly while frothing at the mouth until puce. Army Rumour Service
  • Woodside Petroleum says it will pursue gas markets in the Northern Territory and boost exploration spending in Australia and abroad as domestic oil and condensate fields move into decline.
  • During his travels abroad, he has compared business support levels in different countries, and says the county has much to be proud of.
  • But "without long-term sustentive technology transfers and financial support from abroad, it will be difficult for China to significantly reduce total carbon dioxide emissions," the report said. Undefined
  • He wanted to make money and went abroad with this end in view.
  • On my walk from the taxi to KK House, I thankfully ran into Nicole, the Projects Abroad volunteer who "vacationed" with us to Cape Coast last weekend. TravelPod.com TravelStream™ — Recent Entries at TravelPod.com
  • -- Captain A. Carlton, late of the Light Dragoons, has just succeeded to the title and estates of his great grandfather, the late Earl of Castlemere, which title had lain dormant for several years, in consequence of the only son of the late nobleman never having assumed the title, and died in obscurity abroad, and we, learn that the new Earl is about to lead to the hymenial altar the beautiful Miss Vellenaux A Novel
  • Musharraf told a press conference Saturday that he succeeded in selling a positive image of Pakistan abroad and that the attack might have been aimed at tarnishing the gains of his tour.
  • There were five different passports that each had a different alias he used whenever he traveled abroad.
  • As Hitler's imminent demise was scented, Stalin rose to new heights of prestige at home and abroad.
  • A brown sunburnt gentleman, who appears in some inaptitude for sleep to be wandering abroad rather than counting the hours on a restless pillow, strolls hitherward at this quiet time. Bleak House
  • The exhibition reflected concurrent developments abroad.
  • That is what attracts investment from abroad and makes it profitable for domestic industry to invest as well.
  • In other cases, Revenue was concerned other individuals granted reliefs under section 481 spent budgets abroad or did not even make a proper film.
  • In the new world, arms sales abroad are a more critical problem than superpower arms control.
  • The relative cheapness of foreign travel means that more people are going abroad than ever before.
  • It took hot competition from abroad, however, to show us just how good Scottish cashmere really is.
  • And it's one reason why you have to continue to pursue aggress ive counterterrorism policies abroad, to prevent that kind of scenario and also to prevent that kind of reaction. We're All Keynesians--Not
  • My aunt asked me to join in with her on her holidays abroad.
  • She was abroad all last summer.
  • According to a recent survey published by To Vima, a left-of-center newspaper, four out of 10 Greek college graduates from the ages of 22 to 35 are actively seeking jobs abroad.
  • She's moving abroad to make a fresh start .
  • Swedish companies underwent fusions and shifted sections of their business abroad to countries with lower labour costs.
  • What scares me is that many of those who voted for her in the past now think she's insane, and yet she gets a big hand abroad.
  • Its immunodiagnosis and immunoprophylaxis evokes much attention of scholar in domestic and abroad.
  • Supporters of deradicalization view it as the strategy to counter violent extremism both at home and abroad.
  • In fact India's gurus have done much a better job than its politicians and diplomats, in projecting the country's image abroad.
  • He changed his identity and moved abroad on his release from prison.
  • How can we expect this institution to be an effective dispenser of services for all those with AIDS, let alone a leader of political struggles around AIDS in black communities here and abroad?
  • A massive exodus of doctors is forcing the government to recruit from abroad.
  • Such expeditions were set on foot either by some chieftain who rode from aoul to aoul calling upon the brave to follow him; or by a summons sent abroad to the warriors of a certain district inviting them to assemble in the council ring at a given time and place for the purpose of agreeing upon an attack upon some fort, or a foray within the lines of the enemy. Life of Schamyl And Narrative of the Circassian War of Independence Against Russia
  • It was their first holiday abroad together. Times, Sunday Times
  • Who says you have to build up expensive roaming charges abroad if you want to download maps and information to your mobile? Times, Sunday Times
  • We need to be more energetic in promoting ourselves abroad.
  • In 1333 he made a rare journey abroad to deliver the new archbishop, John Stratford, his pallium.
  • Because of illness she didn't get much benefit from her stay abroad.
  • Sampling the local cuisine is one of the delights of a holiday abroad.
  • South African citizens living abroad at the time of the elections will not be allowed to vote.
  • There is no escaping the fact of the Crusader's savage butchery - of Jews at home and of Muslims abroad.
  • So despite the widespread acceptance of bioengineered crops in this country, farmers still worry whether they'll be able to sell what they grow at home and abroad.
  • Municipal Committees, Indians abroad and Gurudwara Committees subscribed liberally to the INA funds.
  • We have budgeted for the holiday abroad.
  • Many bodachs are abroad, and shadowing a new stranger in town called Bob Robertson.
  • It is an offer that no other coal supplier at home or abroad can make.
  • Part of this is because most top African players are based abroad, which leaves the domestic leagues to serve as perennial feeder clubs. Times, Sunday Times
  • If ones hears the rumbling approach of a runaway train, why should one's panic be lessened by the knowledge that the engineer, conductor, crew, and passengers abroad the train are well medicated, and, as a result, are all models of self-esteem and self-confidence, are imbrued with glowing good cheer, and are at peace with themselves and the world? The Rise of Pharmatopia
  • She starts off, by design, as an unsympathetic character (hence the titled comeuppance), who, like any newcomer in a Hollywood flick, not only learns to cope well enough (despite the natives) to stay in Japan and grow, but also to recommend to everyone (in a self-important interview in the back of the book) to try living overseas (I agree, of course, but one year abroad hardly makes one an authority on world travel). Debito.org
  • There are many Filipinos abroad who choose to remain Filipinos despite the enticements of a foreign land.
  • After living abroad for so long,(sentence dictionary) he found it difficult to readjust to life at home.
  • Few, very few, fo that even among us, flraightis the gate and narrow is the way which leadeth to life, and few there be which are going therein; even our nation abounds - with baptized infidels* Thas whether we look abroad or at home, we fee darknefs hath covered the earth and grofs darknefs the people who dwell therein* Ten sermons on the Millennium; or, The glory of the latter days; and five sermons on what ...
  • This also applies to items that are bought abroad. Times, Sunday Times
  • The books about Harry Potter are very popular now, both at home and abroad.
  • Having said that, it is still a known fact that certainpeople associatedwith "Zionism" has had an adverse affect on foreign policy abroad. Joe Lieberman; Fascist Censor (with poll)
  • The title article calls for “retrenchment” in the “humanitarian missions” abroad that are consuming the country’s wealth, so as to arrest the American decline that is a major theme of international affairs discourse, usually accompanied by the corollary that power is shifting to the East, to China and maybe India. Noam Chomsky: "Losing" the World
  • The truth is that the great economic boom provided employment - at home and for emigrants abroad-on a quite unprecedented scale.
  • Only once has a player cooked for him, when he had a double hernia and his family were abroad. Times, Sunday Times
  • The looming spectres raised by her mother’s information, the wearing sense of being over-weighted in the race, were driving her to a Hamlet-like fantasticism and defiance of augury; moreover, she was abroad. The Hand of Ethelberta
  • Britain could fashion internal controls based on compulsory apprenticeship training, or stopping unscrupulous employers hiring workers from abroad without advertising jobs in Britain. Times, Sunday Times
  • Every nook and cranny of the house was stuffed with souvenirs of their trips abroad.
  • Human limits are tested when any team mounts a campaign on two big fronts at home and abroad. The Sun
  • All you have to do is get a reasonably well paid job abroad in a poorish country and live the ex-pat lifestyle. Upstairs, Downstairs and servant porn | Kathryn Hughes
  • Thanks to security breaches both in the U.S. and abroad, it's become a word that conjures much angstier feelings. by Sam Adams The Clog
  • When I learned of the chance, I decided to study abroad, finishing my master's at a French university where I could hone my new skill.
  • He's now exporting them abroad. The Sun
  • These scholars went abroad for the prosecution of their studies.
  • Her paintings are well considered abroad.
  • It is difficult getting back to the daily round after a fortnight's holiday abroad.
  • His final official engagement abroad was an audience with the Pope, at which he sought benediction for a formal conversion to Catholicism.
  • Before going abroad, check what charges your debit and credit card companies levy and whether they have a fee for cash withdrawals. Times, Sunday Times

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy