different between bygone vs foregoneyourewelcome
bygone
English
Etymology
From by (adverb) +? gone.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?ba???n/
- (US) IPA(key): /?ba???n/
- Homophone: bigon (depending on the dialect)
Adjective
bygone (not comparable)
- Having been or happened in the distant past.
Synonyms
- foregone, historical; see also Thesaurus:past
Translations
Noun
bygone (plural bygones)
- (usually in the plural) An event that happened in the past.
- 1881, Pearl Hyem, The fisherman's cove; or, Christianity realised (page 54)
- Jennie Fox watched it with thoughtful pleasure, and the rest were chatting and telling of bygones, enjoying a glass of egg-hot; it being a custom for them to partake of this beverage on this particular night.
- 1881, Pearl Hyem, The fisherman's cove; or, Christianity realised (page 54)
Related terms
- let bygones be bygones
Translations
Anagrams
- gone by
bygone From the web:
- what bygones means
- what bygone is bygone
- meaning of bygone days
- what's bygone era
- bygone era means
- bygone what tamil meaning
- what does bygones mean
- what is bygone ages
foregoneyourewelcome
foregoneyourewelcome From the web:
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