Definition von out out im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch
- Jack out of doors
- A homeless person, or vagrant
the Lord Julio Romero at Yvoy, having committed this oversight to issue out of his holde, to parlie with the Constable of France, at his returne found the Towne taken, and himselfe jack-out-of-doors.
- Sunday out
- A domestic servant's Sunday off
- X out
- to cross out with letter X's, or with scribble, or with lines
- Xed out
- Simple past tense and past participle of X out
- Xes out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of X out
- Xing out
- Present participle of X out
- acted out
- Simple past tense and past participle of act out
Despite already being aware, he acted out the pretence of a surprise.
- acts out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of act out
Despite already being aware, he acts out the pretence of a surprise.
- air out
- To expose to air; to leave open or spread out, as to allow odor or moisture to dissipate
If you air out your sleeping bag after you use it, it will smell better the next time you get in.
- aired out
- Simple past tense and past participle of air out
- airs out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of air out
- all out
- The state of a side having no more men to bat, thus ending its innings
- all out
- With maximum effort
- all-out
- covering all aspects without exception
This book is an all-out examination of a very important issue in our community.
- ask out
- To invite somebody, especially on a date
How do I get a shy man to ask me out?.
- back out
- To withdraw from something one has promised to do
She backed out of organizing the fund-raising.
- back out
- To reverse a vehicle from a confined space
He backed out of the garage.
- bag out
- to criticise someone
I don't mean to bag you out, but that top is really not flattering on you.
- bail out
- To rescue, especially financially
Once again, the industry got itself in trouble and government had to bail it out.
- bail out
- To exit an aircraft while in flight
Holmes bailed out of his fighter and parachuted onto an apartment house.
- bail out
- To secure the release of an arrested person by providing bail money
- bail out
- To sell all or part of one's holdings in stocks, real estate, a business, etc
I'm going to bail out of stocks and buy gold instead.
- bailed out
- Simple past tense and past participle of bail out
- bails out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bail out
- balance out
- To counteract one another so as to be balanced
If you add consider all the negative and all the positive factors, it should balance out to something acceptable.
- bale out
- Alternative spelling of bail out
- baling out
- Present participle of bale out
- balls-out
- extreme, extremely great
- balls-out
- with great abandon
- bat out
- to flatten somehting (e.g. with a rolling pin)
- bat out
- to churn out, produce hurriedly
- bat out
- to continue batting (normally to prevent what would otherwise result in losing a match)
- bawl out
- To have a serious argument accompanied with shouting
- be on its way out
- To be in the process of becoming redundant
- bearing out
- Present participle of bear out
- beat out
- To extinguish
He managed to beat the flames out with a blanket.
- beat out
- to win by a narrow margin
- beat out
- To sound a rhythm on a percussion instrument such as a drum
The drummer beat out a steady slow march.
- beat the shit out of
- To beat really badly
- bed out
- To transfer a young plant from an inside location such as a greenhouse to an outdoors flower bed
- beefed out
- Having been improved greatly or upgraded; beefed up
Having beefed out his computer with the latest equipment, he was sure it would run the new video game.
- beefed out
- muscular, often in an exaggerated way
The superhero looked even more beefed out on the poster than in the comics.
- bell out
- To open out into a bell shape
Her dress belled out at the bottom.
- belt out
- to sing loudly
He belted out Sweet Child of Mine at the karaoke.
- black out
- To make dark
The Venetian blinds and the drapes, she thought, would completely black out the room from the ocean side.
- black out
- to censor or cover up
I have blacked out your television, every station in the world is mine.
- blank out
- To become blank
I'm blanking out on your name, I'm afraid.
- blank out
- To cause (something) to become blank
He blanked out the abuse he had suffered as a child.
- bleep out
- to censor inappropriate spoken words by obscuring them with the sound of a bleep
- blimp out
- To become fat or fatter, especially as a result of excessive eating
Now that I am exercising regularly, I can pig out without blimping out.
- bliss out
- to experience bliss, be blissful
- blobbed out
- Simple past tense and past participle of blob out
- blobs out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of blob out
- blot out
- to obscure
The moon blotted out the sun and all was dark.
- blow out
- To deflate quickly on being punctured
The tire blew out on a corner.
- blow out
- In a sporting contest, to dominate and defeat an opposing team, especially by a large scoring margin
The No. 1-rated football team proceeded to blow out its undermanned opponent.
- blow someone out of the water
- To trounce; to defeat someone thoroughly, at a game or in battle
With a garden hose, you can blow your opponent out of the water, if he only has a squirt gun.
- bolt out of the blue
- A complete surprise; something totally unexpected
- borne out
- Substantiated
Later experiments have borne out his theory.
- borne out
- Past participle of bear out
- bottle out
- To fail to perform a promised or planned action due to lack of courage
I had really wanted to dive off the 10-meter platform, but in the end I bottled out.
- bowl out
- To dismiss or be dismissed bowled
- bowl-out
- A series of deliveries at an unguarded wicket at the end of a non-first-class cricket match, used to decide the winner of a drawn match
- bowled out
- Simple past tense and past participle of bowl out
- box out
- To position oneself between an opposition player and the basket in anticipation of getting a rebound
- branch out
- to expand in the manner of branches
The chart starts in the center and branches out from there.
- break out
- To begin suddenly; to emerge in a certain condition
The pretty lips pouted awhile but then she glanced up and broke out into a joyous little laugh which had in it all the freshness of a young May morning.
- break out
- to separate from a bundle
Break out the cables from the harness once they are inside the frame.
- breaking out
- Present participle of break out
- breaks out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of break out
- breathe out
- To exhale (something)
- breathe out
- To exhale
- bring out
- To cause a visible symptom such as spots or a rash
Eating strawberries always brings me out in a rash.
- brings out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bring out
- broke out
- Simple past of break out
- broken out
- Past participle of break out
- brown out
- Temporary dimming of vision, usually with a brown hue and accompanied by loss of peripheral vision or tunnel vision
On rising suddenly from her chair she experienced a brown out and had to sit down again quickly.
- brown out
- To experience a partial loss of vision having the characteristics of a brownout, to suffer a brownout
The pilot pulled up hard into a tight loop and browned out, losing sight of the target.
- bug out
- miss school, play truant, play hooky
I go to Stockton High, but normally I bug out.
- bugging out
- Present participle of bug out
- bulk out
- To cause to be thicker, fatter or more bulky
- bum out
- To cause a person to be depressed or disappointed
It bums me out that I can’t play, but I’m glad my brother has the opportunity,” Austin Baker said.
- burn out
- To extinguish due to lack of fuel
Mr. Mason, shivering as some one chanced to open the door, asked for more coal to be put on the fire, which had burnt out its flame, though its mass of cinder still shone hot and red. The footman who brought the coal, in going out, stopped near Mr. Eshton's chair, and said something to him in a low voice, of which I heard only the words, old woman,—quite troublesome..
- burned out
- Simple past of burn out
- burst out
- To appear suddenly
- burst out laughing
- to suddenly start laughing intensely
- bursting out
- Present participle of burst out
- bust out
- to free from captivity
They tried to bust the prisoner out, but were thwarted by the police.
- bust out
- to bring out, to take out
- bust out
- to reveal, to show
- buy out
- to purchase the ownership of a company
- buy someone out
- To purchase someone's property (particularly real estate) or someone's share of a property, partnership, company, etc
- call out
- To specify, especially in detail
They call out 304 stainless steel in the drawing, but the part was made from aluminum.
- call out
- An incidence of someone being summoned for some purpose
I had to pay for the call out of the plumber after the pipe burst.
- call out
- To yell out; to vocalize audibly; announce
You just call out my name / And you know wherever I am / I'll come running to see you again.
- call out
- To challenge, to denounce
He was very insulting. Finally Jack called him out and shut him up.
- call out
- To order into service; to summon into service
The Governor called out the National Guard.
- call-out
- A caption or label
- called out
- Simple past tense and past participle of call out
- calls out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of call out
- cancel out
- To neutralize the effect of something
The two filters cancelled each other out.
- carries out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of carry out
- carry out
- To hold while moving something out
And so the little Rabbit was put into a sack with the old picture-books and a lot of rubbish, and carried out to the end of the garden behind the fowl-house.
- carry out
- To fulfill
The Boy was going to the seaside to-morrow. Everything was arranged, and now it only remained to carry out the doctor's orders.
- carrying out
- Present participle of carry out
- carve out
- To hollow by carving
- cash out
- To retire; to exchange gambling chips for money when finished gambling
- cast out
- To drive out; to expel
- cast out nines
- To apply a procedure for verifying whether an arithmetic operation is probably correct or certainly incorrect using modulo characteristics of these specific integer combinations
- catch out
- To discover or expose as fake or insincere
- catch out
- To put a batsman out by catching the batted ball before it touches the ground
- check out
- To record (someone) as leaving the premises or as taking something therefrom, as from a library or shop
The library assistant was checking people out.
- check out
- To withdraw (an item), as from a library, and have the withdrawal recorded
He checked his favorite mystery out for the twenty-third time.
- check out
- To leave in a hurry
- check out
- To obtain computer source code from a repository
- check out
- To examine, inspect, look at closely, ogle; to investigate
Check us out on the Web at http://en.wiktionary.org!.
- checked out
- Simple past tense and past participle of check out
- checking out
- Present participle of check out
- chew out
- To lecture, scold, reprimand, or rebuke
His dad chewed him out after seeing the failing grades.
- chicken out
- To shy away from a daring task; to decline, refuse, or avoid something due to fear or uncertainty
We almost convinced his dad to ride the roller coaster, but he chickened out when he saw how high it went.
- chill out
- To relax or take time out; to calm down. Also chill
I wish I could chill out about the neighbor's barking dog, but it wakes me up every night.
- chilled out
- Simple past tense and past participle of chill out
- chilling out
- Present participle of chill out
- chuck out
- To discard, to dispose of
- churn out
- To produce a large quantity of (something) rapidly and easily
Barbara Cartland was renowned for her ability to churn out romantic novels.
- clean out
- To empty completely; to remove all money or possessions from
The divorce cleaned him out.
- clean out
- To clean, especially to tidy by removing the contents
Clean out your purse and at least get rid of all the trash you're hauling around.
- cleaned out
- Simple past tense and past participle of clean out
- clear out
- to completely empty
clear out your inbox to make more space.
- clear out
- to remove or eject (from), especially forcibly
We need to get the trees cleared out the way before anything can drive down this path.
- clear-out
- The act of emptying something
We should give the garage a clear-out to make space for the new car.
- clear-out
- This word needs a definition. Please help out and add a definition, then remove the text {{rfdef}}
- cleared out
- Simple past tense and past participle of clear out
- clearing out
- Present participle of clear out
- clears out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of clear out
- clock out
- To end work; to officially record a time when one terminates a period of work
They stated that the reason they were late was because their relief did not arrive in time for them to return to the guard house and clock out.
- clock out
- To transmit individual bits of data under the control of a clock
- coffeed out
- feeling jumpy; caffeine-nervous; feeling any of the symptoms of caffeine overload
- come out
- To be discovered, be revealed
It came out that he had been lying all the time.
- come out
- To make a formal debut in society
- come out
- To walk onto the field at the beginning of an innings
- come out in the wash
- Of problems or difficulties, to work out, resolve, or become understood eventually and naturally
It may look like a huge mess now, but I expect that it will all come out in the wash as time goes on.
- come out of one's shell
- To reveal one's true self
- come out smelling of roses
- Alternative form of smell like a rose
- come out swinging
- To display spunk and strength of character, especially when rising above or when fighting back against trouble or adversity
She'd endured cruelty and grief and still came out swinging.
- come out with
- To say something unexpected
He came out with a very dubious excuse.
- comes out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of come out
- comes out of the closet
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of come out of the closet
- coming out
- Present participle of come out
- coming out of one's ears
- In great or excess quantity
You'll get tomatoes coming out of your ears.
- coming out of the closet
- Present participle of come out of the closet
- comment out
- To temporarily disable a section of source code by converting it into a comment
- conk out
- To fall fast asleep; to sleep soundly
He wasn't there, just the dog, conked out on the porch.
- cop-out
- A person who cops out
He's always a cop-out when there's hard work to be done.
- cop-out
- Avoidance or inadequate performance of a task or duty; the action of copping out
His disappearance on the day of the audition was just a cop-out.
- cop-out
- An excuse made in order to avoid performing a task or duty; a reason offered when someone cops out
It was a cop-out to say he couldn't sign the petition because he sprained his wrist.
- copped out
- Simple past tense and past participle of cop out
- copping out
- Present participle of cop out
- count out
- To enumerate items while organizing or transferring them
The bank teller counted out five twenty-dollar bills and gave them to me.
- count out
- To determine that a competitor has lost a match, by a referee's enumeration aloud of the increments of time for which the competitor has been incapacitated
The champ was knocked unconscious and counted out in the third round.
- crash out
- To be eliminated
- creep someone out
- To make uncomfortable or afraid
That janitor who's always talking about blood creeps me out.
- cried out
- Simple past tense and past participle of cry out
- cried out against
- Simple past tense and past participle of cry out against
- cried out for
- Past participle of cry out for
- cries out against
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cry out against
- cries out for
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cry out for
- cross out
- To strike out; to draw a line through
If you make a mistake, just cross it out.
- cry one's eyes out
- To moan
- crying out
- Present participle of cry out
- crying out against
- Present participle of cry out against
- crying out for
- Present participle of cry out for
- cut it out
- To stop; refrain from; halt
Would you please cut it out? I'm trying to get some work done here.
- cut out
- To refrain from (doing something, using something etc.)
He had to cut out smoking in order to be prepared for the marathon.
- cut out
- To remove, omit
If we cut out the middle-man, we will both have better profits.
- cut out
- To intercept
- cut-out
- A device that disconnects an electric circuit under certain dangerous circumstances
- cut-out
- A trusted middleman, especially in espionage
- cutting out
- Present participle of cut out
- day out
- An excursion, returning home on the same day
A visit to the Science Museum in London will be a day out to remember.
- die out
- To become extinct
The dinosaurs died out a long time ago.
- dig out
- To find, or retrieve something by removing overlying material, or material that hides it
I shall try to dig out my old textbooks.
- dig out of a hole
- To save someone or something from trouble
- digs out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dig out
- dish out
- To distribute or deliver something
She can dish out criticism but she can't take it.
- dish out
- To put (food) on to a dish ready for eating
- dished out
- Simple past tense and past participle of dish out
- dishing out
- Present participle of dish out
- don't let the door hit you on the way out
- Used to indicate that one is glad to see someone leaving
- down and out
- In a condition of poverty or debility, especially as a result of experiencing a financial or personal setback
People who are down and out need some place to turn.
- down-and-out
- Alternative spelling of down and out
- drag out
- To extend or lengthen excessively
I don't want to drag out this talk, so I'll stop unless you have questions.
- draw out
- To physically extract, as blood from a vein
- draw out
- To extract, bring out, as concealed information; elicit; educe
- drawn out
- Past participle of draw out
- drawn out
- Extended; prolonged; protracted; made to last longer than necessary
Graduation speeches are always so long and drawn out.
- drawn-out
- Protracted, made to take a longer period of time than necessary
- drew out
- Simple past of draw out
- dried out
- Old; worn out; useless
- dropped out
- Simple past tense and past participle of drop out
- drown out
- To cover, obscure, or hide by being louder than
He uses the music to drown out other noises around him.
- dry out
- To sober up; to cease to be drunk
- drying out
- Present participle of dry out
- duck out
- To depart quickly or exit abruptly, especially in a manner which does not attract notice and before a meeting, event, etc. has concluded
Cathy Song needed to duck out from work at 3pm to ferry her child from pre-school to a neighbour's.
- duck out
- or from To move or act so as to achieve avoidance, escape, or evasion
ny project for renewal is subject to a wide variety of destabilizing forces, not least when elites seek to duck out from the commitments they themselves have made.
- duke it out
- To fight, especially with the fists
A large crowd came to watch the boxers duke it out.
- duke it out
- To argue heavily or at length
Like pharmaceutical companies that sue generic drug makers over their patents or technology companies that duke it out over who owns the right to microchip designs, Levi’s says it is trying to protect its most valuable asset, its trademarks. - 29/01/2007, New York Times.
- dummies out
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dummy out
- dummy out
- To remove (a feature, subplot, item, or character) from a video game in the process of localizing that game from a foreign country
- dump out
- To discard, to throw away, to toss out
- eat out
- To perform cunnilingus
The lesbian couple ate each other out.
- eat out of someone's hand
- To behave in a docile, submissive way towards somebody
Violetta is well aware of all this and goes out of her way to charm him. . . . He eats out of her hand and would not notice is she fed him rocks.
- eat someone out of house and home
- To consume such a portion of one's store of food that little is left for the owner
or I will ride thee o' nights like the mare.
- edge out
- To win in a contest or a game by a narrow margin of victory
- edit out
- To remove before publication or broadcasting (as an editorial decision)
- eke out
- to supplement
The old man eked out his pension by selling vegetables from his garden.
- eked out
- Simple past tense and past participle of eke out
- eking out
- Present participle of eke out
- empty out
- To completely empty
I don't believe it'll be of much use to him, any more, said he, for it's full of polliwogs an' fish eggs, an' the water has took all the crinkle out o' the straw an ruined it. I guess, Trot, that the best thing for us to do is to empty out all his body an' carry his head an' clothes along the road till we come to a field or a house where we can get some fresh straw..
- even out
- to become more even