- adverbout (adverb)
- moving or appearing to move away from a particular place, especially one that is enclosed or hidden:"he walked out into the street" · "watch the stars come out"
- situated or operating in the open air, not in buildings:"the search-and-rescue team have been out looking for you"
- no longer detained in custody or in jail:"they would be out on bail in no time"
- situated far or at a particular distance from somewhere:"an old farmhouse right out in the middle of nowhere" · "they lived eight miles out of town" · "the team had put on a marvelous display out in Georgia"
- to sea, away from the land:"the fleet put out from Cyprus"
- (of the tide) falling or at its lowest level:"the tide was going out"
- away from home:"he's gone out"
- in or to a public place for purposes of pleasure or entertainment:"an evening out at a restaurant"
- so as to be revealed or known:"find out what you can"
- aloud; so as to be heard:"Miss Beard cried out in horror"
- at or to an end:"the romance fizzled out"
- so as to be finished or complete:"I'll leave them to fight it out" · "I typed out the poem"
- in various other completive uses:"the crowd had thinned out" · "he crossed out a word"
- (of a light or fire) so as to be extinguished or no longer burning:"at ten o'clock the lights went out"
- (of a stain or mark) no longer visible; removed:"try to get the stain out"
- (of a jury) considering its verdict in secrecy.
- indicating a specified distance away from the goal line or finishing line:"he scored from 70 meters out"
- (of a party, politician, etc.) not in office.
preposition- through to the outside:"he ran out the door"
adjectiveout (adjective)- not at home or at one's place of work:"if he called, she'd pretend to be out"
- (of the ball in tennis and similar games) outside the designated playing area.
- revealed or made public:"the secret was soon out"
- no longer alight; extinguished:"the fire was nearly out"
- (of a book, recording, or other product) published or made available:"the book should be out before the end of the month"
- in existence or use:"it works as well as any system that's out"
- (of a flower) in bloom; open.
- not concealing one's sexuality or gender identity:"I had been out since I was 17"
- at an end:"school was out for the summer"
- informalno longer in fashion:"life in the fast lane is out"
- in a state of unconsciousness.
- boxingunable to rise before the count of ten.
- mistaken; in error:"he was slightly out in his calculations"
- not possible or worth considering:"a trip to the seaside is out"
- cricketbaseballno longer batting or on base, having had one's turn ended by the team in the field:"the Yankees are out in the ninth" · "Johnson was out at second"
nounout (noun) · outs (plural noun) · the outs (plural noun)- informala way of escaping from a problem or dilemma:"he was desperately looking for an out"
- baseballan act of putting a player out.
- (the outs)the political party or politicians not in office.
verbout (verb) · outs (third person present) · outed (past tense) · outed (past participle) · outing (present participle)- reveal the sexual or gender identity of (a person).
- reveal or expose (secret or concealed information) about (a person):"the author was famously outed as a spy" · "his true identity is outed in front of the others"
- datedexpel, reject, or dismiss:"they had outed Asquith quite easily"
- WEST INDIAN ENGLISHextinguish:"out the lamp when you're ready"
- archaicliterarybecome known; emerge:"the truth will out"
OriginOld English ūt (adverb), ūtian (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch uit and German aus.Similar and Opposite Wordsadjective
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Out Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
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