Past events to be put aside.
Sinônimos
Examples for "bygone"
Examples for "bygone"
1More acts from bygone days have decided to go back to work.
2Imperial nostalgia is alive and kicking in yet another bygone empire: Russia.
3SNOW, and its attendant inconveniences, were taken very seriously in bygone times.
4Many of her encounters reflect a growing return to bygone goods-exchange systems.
5These are the days which the people in bygone times eagerly expected.
1Some disciplinary measures were taken but that's water under the bridge now.
2There had been so much water under the bridge, oceans of it.
3That is what matters now, the Saturday match is water under the bridge.
4As if to say it was all water under the bridge.
5Too much water under the bridge, or under the turkey, as it were.
6What you did and didn't mean is all water under the bridge now.
7There's been a lot of water under the bridge since then.'
8It is water under the bridge, said John Tumazos, analyst at Very Independent Research.
9Some 13 months on, though, Woods suggested it was all water under the bridge.
10He was singing about water under the bridge and many images from the movie.
11There's been a lot of muddy water under the bridge.
12What happened between us is water under the bridge.
13Whatever the reason, it's all water under the bridge.
14Cardoso says its all water under the bridge now.
15Maybe there was so much water under the bridge, it had washed the bridge away.
16Even if he-well, that's water under the bridge now.