Definition of Adios

Babylon English
adios
interj. farewell, goodbye (Spanish)

adiós
interj. (Spanish) farewell, goodbye

Search Dictionary:
Search Web Search Dictionary



Adios definition was found in categories: Language, Idioms & Slang(3)  Science & Technology(1)  Encyclopedia(1)  

Adios Definition from Language, Idioms & Slang Dictionaries & Glossaries

WordNet 2.0
adios

Noun
1. a farewell remark; "they said their good-byes"
(synonym) adieu, arrivederci, auf wiedersehen, au revoir, bye, bye-bye, cheerio, good-by, goodby, good-bye, goodbye, good day, sayonara, so long
(hypernym) farewell, word of farewell

Australian Slang
Adios
goodbye

hEnglish - advanced version
adios

adios
\a`dios"\ (?), interj. [sp., fr. l. ad to + deus god. cf. adieu.] adieu; farewell; good-by; -- chiefly used among spanish-speaking people.
note: this word is often pronounced ?*dē"&osl;s, but the spanish accent, though weak, is on the final syllable.



Adios Definition from Science & Technology Dictionaries & Glossaries

Oceanographic, Meteorologal & Climatologal abbreviations and acronyms
ADIOS
Asian Dust Input to the Oceanic System


Adios Definition from Encyclopedia Dictionaries & Glossaries

Wikipedia English - The Free Encyclopedia
Adiós
Adiós is Spanish for "goodbye". Literally translated, the word is the contraction of "a" (to) and "Dios" (God), from the old Spanish phrase "A Dios vais" ("You're going to God", meaning to the Kingdom of Heaven), findable in Don Quixote the novel, making it equivalent to "Godspeed" or "Go with God" ("Vaya con Dios").

See more at Wikipedia.org...


Automatic distillation of structure
Automatic Distillation of Structure (ADIOS) is an algorithm that can analyse source material such as text and come up with meaningful information about the structures used in the source. One application of the algorithm is grammar: ADIOS can read a source text and teach itself grammatical rules based on structures and patterns found in the text. Using these, the system can then produce new, meaningful sentences.

See more at Wikipedia.org...