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good old days
noun as in times of old considered better than present
Example Sentences
Expect lots of smiles and hugs and stories of the good old days, some of which, embellished or not, Sternberg will turn into news releases.
Evangelical Christian religion, beyond representing the “good old days” also allows for the possibility of recuperating, or at least mitigating, lost status.
They direct wars of conquest from the comforts of Palatine Hill rather than lead the men themselves like in the good old days of Caesar massacring the Gauls.
This isn’t a “good old days” nostalgia argument.
The Dallas Cowboys have gone 12-5 the past three years before calamitous play-off endings just added to the enduring soap opera of 'America's Team' and their pursuit of the good old days.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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