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  1. Toodle-oo is a family fun game with a strategic twist. We had a really enjoyable evening playing the game for the first time. I can see this becoming a fami...

  2. The British term ‘toodle-oo’ is a fellow-traveller of various terms associated with walking or departing in a carefree manner – toddle, tootle and their extended forms toddle-off and tootle-pip. Let’s also not forget tootle-oo, which is a commonly heard alternative form of toodle-oo, and also its Irish variant tooraloo.

  3. TOODLE-OO definition: 1. a way of saying goodbye: 2. a way of saying goodbye: . Learn more.

  4. 1900s. The earliest known use of the interjection toodle-oo is in the 1900s. OED's earliest evidence for toodle-oo is from 1907, in Punch. toodle-oo is of unknown origin. See etymology.

  5. Toodle-oo. The salutation toodle-oo, meaning “good-bye” or “so long,” is forever associated with carefree, upper-class Brits, in part because of its frequent use in the works of Wodehouse. Its use began in the years after 1900, and is thought to have its origins in the sound of the then-newfangled car horns that sometimes signaled ...

  6. 1. farewell: a conventional expression used at leave-taking or parting with people and at the loss or rejection of things or ideas. noun. 2. a leave-taking; parting. they prolonged their goodbyes for a few more minutes. 3. a farewell. they said goodbyes to each other.

  7. He always exited with a "toodle-oo" or "pip-pip" or even a "toodle-pip". He and his friends would have picked up the odd French expression in that milieu. (Before we say, "Toodle-oo" to Raven Edwards, let's thank her for suggesting this cute little denizen of the English lexicon as a Good Word.) P.S. - Register for the Daily Good Word E-Mail!

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