Absent without permission.
1For soldiers to be classified as deserters, they must be awol for 30 days.
2The former British number one appeared to go awol for much of last night's final.
3The USA had a good World Cup but their coach's famous attacking ideals went awol.
4It is the fourth film in the franchise, but many recurring stars have gone awol.
5So far, so good -but it's at about this point that the comedy goes awol.
6They are used to their players caring in these parts and it's gone awol too often for comfort lately.
7But quality control went awol.
8This government can say and do whatever it damn well pleases, with Labour awol until it has a leader.
9The number applying for conscientious objector status has quadrupled since 2000 but remains small, though many more simply go awol.
10Dembélé's relationship with the club and fans suffered this summer when he went awol after Barcelona made their interest clear.
11You don't have to be a Pink Floyd junkie to notice that a rather important word seems to have gone awol.
12Play resumed, the buzzer sounded as a Soviet long pass went awol, and again the Americans jumped and whooped and hollered.
13Bunking off to see the children would have been unforgivable but going awol for sex simply made you one of the gang.
14By November 2012, Redknapp was back in business at another Premiership side, Queens Park Rangers, but his magic touch again went awol.
15To grasp fully why some troops go awol, one must look beyond the polls to what made them join in the first place.
16The club's record signing struck a hat-trick against the Norwegian champions on his return after going awol from the African Cup of Nations.
Awol per variant geogràfica