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View definitions for old days

old days

noun as in history

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Example Sentences

In the old days, drenched in racism as the South was, it was economically populist.

In the old days, when Bahari would go to Iran, it got naked.

It was reminiscent of the old days of backroom politics and half-drunk reporters swaying against their typewriters.

We sat in the shadows, drinking bourbon brought from the liquor store on the corner, listening to Furry talk about the old days.

As in the old days, some women are deemed reliable by the xenophobes, and some are not, and those who are not must live in fear.

In the old days every great man kept a toad-eater; sometimes his functions were highly paid—Wolff's are, I fancy.

As in the old days of the Rusholme Road, Batterby flung his money about with unostentatious generosity.

I stayed with my drink until Jorgensen drifted in to have a couple with me and talk of the old days.

Gone were the old days when a man drank till his brain was fire and his pistol went off by itself.

Here we are eleven miles from the Borough, and at the end of the first stage out of London in the old days of the mail-coaches.

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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