aborad

IPA: ʌbˈɔrʌd

adverb

  • (anatomy) Away from the oral opening or mouth (compare with ventral)
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Examples of "aborad" in Sentences

  • STENY HOYER, (D) MARYLAND: The pure vote is national security here at home and national security aborad.
  • Also, does he really believe that Gitmo or Abu Ghraib makes it more or less likely that a US POW would be tortured when interrogated aborad?
  • The American troops come home in disgrace and the American military is taunted and ridiculed by the American media, global media, Islamic terrorists, and the moonbats here and aborad.
  • Americans seem ready to fight a new war aborad, and at home: By a wide margin, Americans think Iran is more of a threat to the world than Iraq was before the United States took military action there.
  • They've brought in Peter Sollett, director of "Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist," to rewrite Jon Hartmere's script, and hired musical movie veterans Craig Zadan and Neil Meron to come aborad as producers.
  • As for the stuff about living aborad, I take great umbrage at someone who admits to spending two weeks a year in this country and paying no taxes here lecturing me on how localy elected councillors should spend money.
  • Both he and his advisers felt that every day's delay was a substantial gain, and that the maintenance of the _status quo_, with no fresh outbreak at home and no unfriendly expression aborad, was of incalculable advantage to the cause of the Union.
  • Custom, moreover, proclaims as beautiful those excellences of man and woman with which God gifted them at birth. 144 Thus for a woman to bide tranquilly at home rather than roam aborad is no dishonour; but for a man to remain indoors, instead of devoting himself to outdoor pursuits, is a thing discreditable.

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synonyms for aborad
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