We have no meanings for "go awol" in our records yet.
1 The former British number one appeared to go awol for much of last night's final.
2 The number applying for conscientious objector status has quadrupled since 2000 but remains small, though many more simply go awol .
3 To grasp fully why some troops go awol , one must look beyond the polls to what made them join in the first place.
4 Robots that mow the lawn for you already exist, but they usually require you to mark out the perimeter so the robot doesn't go awol .
5 You say you didn't choose to go AWOL from the Coleridge trip?
6 His grandson is missing and the navy says the kid's gone AWOL .
7 More than that, I worried about Vasilyev's reaction to our going AWOL .
8 A recruit trying to go AWOL wasn't likely to catch their eye.
9 Usually a bar manager has employees going AWOL all the time.
10 That's what had happened with the two sweeps who'd gone AWOL .
11 Surely everything wouldn't fall apart if they went AWOL for a few hours.
12 It's the frigging prize bull that went AWOL when we evacuated the farm.
13 Betty had gone AWOL , just like in Omaha, and Hinton, and Sioux City.
14 Of all the times for Artemis to go AWOL inside his own head.
15 The reasons why players have gone AWOL often reflect the nature of the times.
16 At the age of twenty he had gone AWOL ahead of a third deployment.
Other examples for "go awol"
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This collocation consists of: Go awol across language varieties