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Discover LudwigThe word "cheers" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to express a feeling of thanks, congratulations, or appreciation, or to bid someone goodbye. Example sentence: "Cheers! I'm so happy for you!"
Dictionary
cheers,
interjection
A common toast used when drinking in company.
Exact(60)
"Five years ago I stood here and said we had made history here in Brighton," Lucas said to loud cheers inside the Brighton Centre conference venue.
The hall erupted in cheers.
There were cheers.
He got cheers when he suggested reporters at least dine in local restaurants to help the area.
As the draw unfolded, there were cheers and sharp inhales of breath in the room as Mexico drew Brazil, though any schadenfreude swiftly turned to groans as Honduras landed in the softer group of Switzerland, Ecuador and France, and the USA's last hopes of a softer landing faded.
Despite the anti-Thatcher cheers, and jokes at her expense, there was little triumphalism.
The lawyer left the coach to cheers from her fellow hens and confirmed she got a photo with the Labour leader.
Miliband appeared waving at the door of the coach later, prompting further screams and cheers.
MEP Alyn Smith revealed to cheers that the London branch of the SNP now has more members than the Scottish Liberal Democrats.
The 79-year-old defeated his rival, the Jordanian Prince Ali Bin al-Hussein, to whoops and cheers from his supporters.
Facebook Twitter Google plus Share Share this post Facebook Twitter Google plus close 2.36pm BST14:36 Huge cheers for Alistair Brownlee...... who is smiling as he is introduced to the crowds.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com