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View synonyms for
by-and-by
[bahy-uhn-bahy]
noun
the future.
to meet in the sweet by-and-by.
by and by
adverb
presently or eventually
noun
a future time or occasion
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51Թ History and Origins
Origin of by-and-by1
1300–50; Middle English bi and bi one by one, at once. See by
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Idioms and Phrases
After a while, soon, as in She'll be along by and by. The expression probably relies on the meaning of by as a succession of quantities (as in “two by two”). This adverbial phrase came to be used as a noun, denoting either procrastination or the future. William Camden so used it for the former (Remains, 1605): “Two anons and a by and by is an hour and a half.” And W.S. Gilbert used it in the latter sense when Lady Jane sings plaintively that little will be left of her “in the coming by and by,” that is, as she grows old (Patience, 1881). [Early 1500s]
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
“There is a lovelier country even than that, where we shall go, by-and-by, when we are good enough,” answered Meg with her sweetest voice.
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I refused to say it the southern hymn way—“the sweet by-and-by.”
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Congress lets multinationals earn profits today but pay their taxes by-and-by.
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“You will see by-and-by the evidence upon which I rely.”
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No," he replied; "I will come back by-and-by.
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