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good old days
noun as in times of old considered better than present
Example Sentences
The Dallas Cowboys have gone 12-5 the past three years before calamitous play-off endings just added to the enduring soap opera of 'America's Team' and their pursuit of the good old days.
Why not just send them to the vice principal’s office the way teachers did in the good old days?
In “Crying Inside,” for example, he sings, “I’ve been wisecracking like the good old days / but pretty soon I’m going to slip away.”
Given Scotland have only reached one World Cup in the subsequent three decades shows how spoiled they were in the good old days.
Hampden was as alive as it has been since the good old days when Scotland went thrusting their way through their Euros qualifying group.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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