adios

[ US /ˌɑdiˈoʊs/ ]
NOUN
  1. a farewell remark
    they said their good-byes
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use adios In A Sentence

  • This includes such items as telephones, radios, televisions and recording devices.
  • The firm excels at producing cheap transistor radios.
  • An unnecessary signal: the radios had been dead since the crash landing.
  • Some fans continued throwing, hurling their souvenirs, drink cups, beer bottles, batteries, portable radios and cell phones onto the field.
  • The songs, meanwhile, played on over city loudspeakers and local radios. Times, Sunday Times
  • As for communications equipment, the snipers need small, easily packable radios and a good directional antenna to allow for longer-range communications.
  • We've got tiny little radios that we can put on the honey possums now.
  • The sound of emergency announcements spewing from car radios left blaring as the drivers abandoned their vehicles in terror. The Sun
  • Quamdiu autem tales loquuntur sibi, aut literas ostendunt, circumstant Apparitores extensis brachijs leuatos tenentes mucrones, gladios, gezas, et mackas ad feriendum, et occidendum, si quid dictum vel nunciatum fuerit, quod Imperatori displiceat, quam citò ille signauerit trucidari. The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville
  • Currently, the Italian-built Panthers are being finished off by BAE Systems, with the additional of a machine gun, radios and other accessories, when they will be delivered to the Army, effectively providing "battlefield limousines" for Ruperts – as officers are dismissively called – while troops are forced to patrol in dangerously vulnerable "Snatch" Land Rovers. Feeding the European fantasy
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy