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bye

/bahy/US // baɪ //UK // (baɪ) //

拜拜,再见,拜

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    Also by.

    • : Sports. in a tournament, the preferential status of a player or team not paired with a competitor in an early round and thus automatically advanced to play in the next round: The top three seeded players received byes in the first round.
    • : Golf. the holes of a stipulated course still unplayed after the match is finished.
    • : Cricket. a run made on a ball not struck by the batsman.
    • : something subsidiary, secondary, or out of the way.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : by.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Mitchell Trubisky returned to the starting-quarterback role for the Bears after Nick Foles suffered a hip injury in Chicago’s final pre-bye game.

  • He says good-bye every May when the star slips behind the sun from the perspective of Earth, and says hello again in August when the star comes back.

  • The 8-2 Saints took command in the race for the top seed and the lone bye when the Packers fell, 34-31, in overtime to the Indianapolis Colts.

  • Reid’s teams have a record of 18-3 in his career in post-bye games.

  • The Packers will want to see the Bears, against whom they still have a pair of games, continuing to implode when Chicago returns from its bye.

  • The bye bye is being sung, incidentally, by mothers to their babies condemned to death by King Herod.

  • Her very first performance onstage came at the age of 4, when she cameoed as a dancing flower in the musical Bye Bye Birdie.

  • “Good bye boys, I die a true American,” were his last words, according to the headstone.

  • I never knew how long he would last before he said, “Okay, bye.”

  • They were calling out to family and friends, asking if there was anything that could be done, and in some cases, saying good-bye.

  • Here were the sources (in part) of the Po and of the Rhine, but I was rather in haste to bid the former good-bye.

  • "Yes," said Punch, lifted up in his father's arms to wave good-bye.

  • Good-bye, then, Miss Warrender; parting is such sweet sorrow, I e'en could say good-bye until to-morrow.

  • You had better go to him, Dolly, and bid him good bye, before he takes the team to the field.

  • Colonial charters were, however, "undoubtedly no more than those of all corporations, which empower them to make bye-laws."