Meaning: n. an endorsement. v. give sanction to. adj. being satisfactory or in satisfactory condition. adv. in a satisfactory or adequate manner.
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1. The inspector chalked O.K. on my baggage.
2. O.K. I'll sign off. We'll talk at the beginning of the week.
3. "I'd like to be alone, O.K?" — "Sure. O.K.".
4. "Any problems?" — "No, I'm O.K."
5. It's O.K. I smoothed things out.
6. That was O.K. Perhaps it was a good omen.
7. He was seen to wave that he was O.K. to one of the other aircraft.
8. Q Are moisturising shampoos O.K. for all hair types and do you need to use a conditioner with them?
9. O.K. This is the desirable weight range for your health.
10. O.K., it has to be close by, because I had it right before I was hunting around on all fours in front of the liquor cabinet.
11. H.L. Mencken once described "O.K." as "the most successful of Americanisms," an estimation verified by U.S. troops during the Second World War,(sentencedict.com/o.k..html) who reported encountering the phrase all over the world.
12. It's a 2-hour-plus gunfight at the O.K. Corral, except that the weapons are blazing on the streets of Mogadishu, where all lives are expendable.
13. Management by Exception..., 'don't tell someone if everything is O.K.sonly...if something has gone wrong'.
14. A: I just have this one small (bag/ carry-on/ piece of luggage). B: O.K. Here's your ticket, sir.
15. One of the reasons I like to publicize these facts is that I think we can prevent a lot of insomnia and distress just by telling people that short sleep is O.K.