Aboard in a sentence as an adverb

AG worm to all the other laptops aboard the station." Holy ****.

Welcome aboard, pc86. Looking forward to hearing great things from you.

We picked up several from different parts of the planet, took them aboard our recon vessels, and probed them all the way through. They're completely meat."

> With no people aboard to pay, feed, etc, it wouldn’t matter how long it took. Yes, it would, because it would limit the number of times you can turn over your assets, as more of your assets will be locked up in goods in transit at any time, and no bank will offer you free credit for 100% of its value, so there's a real monetary cost to slower delivery.

In another 15 years, almost all adults will be completely used to it, and the idea that we don't need the TSA will sound as absurd to them, as to most of us it seems "absurd" that in fact in the past you could fly in the USA while carrying a rifle or shotgun aboard, with ammo. The flight attendants would offer to stow it for you in a coat locker, but otherwise wouldn't bat an eye.

Aboard definitions

adverb

on a ship, train, plane or other vehicle

adverb

on first or second or third base; "Their second homer with Bob Allison aboard"

adverb

side by side; "anchored close aboard another ship"

See also: alongside

adverb

part of a group; "Bill's been aboard for three years now"