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here's to

  1. One salutes someone or something. For example, Here's to Bill on his retirement, or Here's to the new project. This phrase, nearly always used as a toast to someone or something, is a shortening of here's a health to and has been so used since the late 1500s. Shakespeare had it in Romeo and Juliet (5:3): “Here's to my Love.”



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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Titled “Here’s to You, Mrs. Schneiderman,” the half-hour finds Lane’s Bunny recounting Sybil’s death, using details that mirrored Lavin’s own passing.

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Here’s to the hilarity of ‘The Studio’s’ Kathryn Hahn and the joy of Eva Longoria playing an exaggerated version of herself in ‘Only Murders.’

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Carmen doesn’t nail collegespeak — “Here’s to a night we’ll never remember with the friends we’ll never forgive,” she captions her first selfie with Benny — but she’s skilled at beer pong, first-person shooters and chugging drinks like the frat boys on campus.

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"Here's to a year of making cherished memories, spreading joy, and embracing every precious moment!"

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“Here’s to a year of making cherished memories, spreading joy, and embracing every precious moment!”

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