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Anonymous Posted 9 years ago
Vocabulary

That's what they did in the olden days

Hi all,
what does "That's what they did in the olden days." mean in the following situation:
"July 17th. What a night!'
I don't know if I want to hear this!
- I do!
'Sam rowed me over to the little island.'
That's here. That's Kalokairi.
'We danced on the beach,
and we kissed on the beach,
'and dot, dot, dot.'
What?
'Dot, dot, dot.'
That's what they did in the olden days.
Stop it!
'Sam's the one. I know he is."
Could you explain it/ transform it more simply?
Thank you in advance.
  

Top answer

"in the olden days" means in the past, many years ago. e. e.

  • "in the olden days" means in the past, many years ago.
  • e.
  • e.
  • presumably suggesting that they had ***.
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1 Answers
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"in the olden days" means in the past, many years ago.

In the olden days they did (or possibly wrote) "dot dot dot", i.e. "...", i.e. presumably suggesting that they had ***.

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