bye-bye

[ US /ˈbaɪˈbaɪ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a farewell remark
    they said their good-byes
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How To Use bye-bye In A Sentence

  • But back to the bye-byes: Kurt Warner was given a huge word-hug from Bruno, who once mocked the football great for having hands that were like frying pans. 'Dancing With the Stars': Kurt Warner goes home
  • Everything was fine as loved ones waved bye-bye to me at the bottom (after getting me to sign away the house, car, life insurance etc).
  • I'd push the wrong thing and send myself bye-byes for a couple of hours. Four-Day Planet
  • After being liberated, I looked across the creek bed I had just crossed after my outdoors nap, and seen my first sign, the proverbial whitetail waving sayonara, bye-bye, I'm outta here. Blast From The Past
  • The cops did a few drive-bys, the bums did some walk-bys, and we said bye-bye.
  • So actually, fights don't last long, because once you go down like that, you know, and you make a mistake, it's going to be bye-bye.
  • Yet when it comes to evaluating a woman's qualification to advise, the market gives top dollar to those who weep, those who wail, those who fail, those who spite and those who fall apart when a man says bye-bye.
  • King responded to the salute from Obama with a kind of benumbed indifference, although later in the show he expressed oddly unctuous gratitude to fellow TV talker "Dr. Phil" McGraw, who popped into the studio for a folksy bye-bye. A star-studded, but still somewhat muted, farewell for 'Larry King Live'
  • The finger has been pointed and as it puts out a cigarette and hangs a hat it waves bye-bye (that's a lot of work for a finger).
  • She waved bye-bye and booked out of there.
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