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Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, Dean of the College of Cardinals, presided over the funeral liturgy and delivered the final commendation and valediction.—
Nick Vivarelli,
Variety,
26 Apr. 2025 This record and tour are by no means a last valediction to her music career.—
August Brown,
Los Angeles Times,
30 May 2024 Dorfman’s new book, his thirty-eighth, feels like a valediction to a career that, until now, has been varied in its instruments but consistent in its vision.—
Jonathan Dee,
The New Yorker,
4 Sep. 2023 Will the delicate touch that has scored so effectively with viewers and Emmy voters be abandoned for mawkish valedictions?—
John Anderson,
WSJ,
14 Mar. 2023
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from New Latin valedictiōn-, valedictiō, from Latin valedic-, alternate stem of vale dīcere, valedīcere "to say goodbye," (from vale, interjection, "goodbye, farewell," reduced form of valē, imperative of valēre "to have strength, be well" + dīcere "to speak, say") + -tiōn-, -tiō, noun suffix of action — more at wield, diction