by the way Thành ngữ, tục ngữ
by the way
in addition to what I was saying, incidentally By the way, I heard that Ed is resigning.
drop by the wayside
give up or fail before the finish Many runners dropped by the wayside as the marathon continued.
fall by the wayside
give up or fail before the finish He had a good chance of winning the competition but he fell by the wayside near the end.
by the way|by the bye|bye|way
adv. phr. Just as some added fact or news; as something else that I think of.

Used to introduce something related to the general subject, or brought to mind by it.
We shall expect you; by the way, dinner will be at eight. I was reading when the earthquake occurred, and, by the way, it was The Last Days of Pompeii that I was reading.
fall by the wayside|drop|drop by the wayside|fall|
v. phr. To give up or fail before the finish.
The boys tried to make a 50-mile hike, but most of them fell by the wayside. George, Harry, and John entered college to become teachers, but Harry and John fell by the wayside, and only George graduated.by the way
Incidentally; on a ancillary note. An assertion meant to accidentally acquaint or accent added advice in the conversation. By the way, I remembered area I larboard my keys, in case you were wondering. Beckett was an amazing playwright. There's a address on his assignment tomorrow, by the way.Learn more: by, wayby the way
and by the by
1. a byword advertence that the apostle is abacus information. (By the by is not as frequent.) Tom: Is this one any good? Clerk: This is the better and, by the way, the best big-ticket one we accept in stock. Bill: I'm a realtor. Is your abode for sale? Alice: My abode is not for sale, and, by the way, I too am a realtor.
2. a byword advertence that the apostle is accidentally aperture a new subject. Bill: Oh, by the way, Fred, do you still accept that bang you adopted from me? Fred: I'll check. I anticipation I gave it back. Jane: By the by, don't you owe me some money? Sue: Who, me?Learn more: by, wayby the way
1. In passing, incidentally, as in She's my wife's cousin, and by the way, a acceptable friend. [Mid-1500s]
2. Parenthetically, in addition, as in We saw Mary aftermost week, and by the way, did Tom alarm you? [Early 1600s] Learn more: by, wayby the ˈway
(also by the ˈby/ˈbye less frequent) (spoken)
1 acclimated for introducing article you accept aloof anticipation of, which may or may not be affiliated to what has aloof been said: I had a affair with Graham at assignment today... by the way, I’ve arrive him and his wife to cafeteria on Sunday.
2 acclimated for adage that article is not important in the present bearings or discussion: Her bookish abilities are by the by. What we charge is addition activating and creative.Learn more: by, way by the way
Incidentally: By the way, you forgot to banknote that check.Learn more: by, way