definição e significado de outs | sensagent.com


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alemão búlgaro chinês croata dinamarquês eslovaco esloveno espanhol estoniano farsi finlandês francês grego hebraico hindi holandês húngaro indonésio inglês islandês italiano japonês korean letão língua árabe lituano malgaxe norueguês polonês português romeno russo sérvio sueco tailandês tcheco turco vietnamês

Definição e significado de outs

outs

  • plural of out (noun)
  • present indicative (he,she,it) of out (verb)

Definição

out

1.outside a building"in summer we play outside"

out (adj.)

1.not conscious; lacking awareness and the capacity for sensory perception as if asleep or dead"lay unconscious on the floor"

2.being out or having grown cold"threw his extinct cigarette into the stream" "the fire is out"

3.knocked unconscious by a heavy blow

4.outer or outlying"the out islands"

5.outside or external"the out surface of a ship's hull"

6.no longer fashionable"that style is out these days"

7.directed outward or serving to direct something outward"the out doorway" "the out basket"

8.excluded from use or mention"forbidden fruit" "in our house dancing and playing cards were out" "a taboo subject"

9.not worth considering as a possibility"a picnic is out because of the weather"

10.not allowed to continue to bat or run"he was tagged out at second on a close play" "he fanned out"

11.out of power; especially having been unsuccessful in an election"now the Democrats are out"

12.(colloquial)immoderately desirous of acquiring e.g. wealth"they are avaricious and will do anything for money" "casting covetous eyes on his neighbor's fields" "a grasping old miser" "grasping commercialism" "greedy for money and power" "grew richer and g..."

out (adv.)

1.away from home"they went out last night"

2.outward from a reference point"he kicked his legs out"

3.from one's possession"he gave out money to the poor" "gave away the tickets"

4.moving or appearing to move away from a place, especially one that is enclosed or hidden"the cat came out from under the bed" ;

out (n.)

1.(baseball) a failure by a batter or runner to reach a base safely in baseball"you only get 3 outs per inning"

out (v.)

1.be made known; be disclosed or revealed"The truth will out"

2.reveal (something) about somebody's identity or lifestyle"The gay actor was outed last week" "Someone outed a CIA agent"

3.to state openly and publicly one's homosexuality"This actor outed last year"

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Merriam Webster

OutOut (out), adv. [OE. out, ut, oute, ute, AS. ūt, and ūte, ūtan, fr. ūt; akin to D. uit, OS. ūt, G. aus, OHG. ūz, Icel. ūt, Sw. ut, Dan. ud, Goth. ut, Skr. ud. √198. Cf. About, But, prep., Carouse, Utter, a.] In its original and strict sense, out means from the interior of something; beyond the limits or boundary of somethings; in a position or relation which is exterior to something; -- opposed to in or into. The something may be expressed after of, from, etc. (see Out of, below); or, if not expressed, it is implied; as, he is out; or, he is out of the house, office, business, etc.; he came out; or, he came out from the ship, meeting, sect, party, etc. Out is used in a variety of applications, as: --


1. Away; abroad; off; from home, or from a certain, or a usual, place; not in; not in a particular, or a usual, place; as, the proprietor is out, his team was taken out. Opposite of in. “My shoulder blade is out.” Shak.

He hath been out (of the country) nine years. Shak.

2. Beyond the limits of concealment, confinement, privacy, constraint, etc., actual or figurative; hence, not in concealment, constraint, etc., in, or into, a state of freedom, openness, disclosure, publicity, etc.; a matter of public knowledge; as, the sun shines out; he laughed out, to be out at the elbows; the secret has leaked out, or is out; the disease broke out on his face; the book is out.

Leaves are out and perfect in a month. Bacon.

She has not been out [in general society] very long. H. James.

3. Beyond the limit of existence, continuance, or supply; to the end; completely; hence, in, or into, a condition of extinction, exhaustion, completion; as, the fuel, or the fire, has burned out; that style is on the way out. “Hear me out.” Dryden.

Deceitful men shall not live out half their days. Ps. iv. 23.

When the butt is out, we will drink water. Shak.

4. Beyond possession, control, or occupation; hence, in, or into, a state of want, loss, or deprivation; -- used of office, business, property, knowledge, etc.; as, the Democrats went out and the Whigs came in; he put his money out at interest. “Land that is out at rack rent.” Locke. “He was out fifty pounds.” Bp. Fell.

I have forgot my part, and I am out. Shak.

5. Beyond the bounds of what is true, reasonable, correct, proper, common, etc.; in error or mistake; in a wrong or incorrect position or opinion; in a state of disagreement, opposition, etc.; in an inharmonious relation. “Lancelot and I are out.” Shak.

Wicked men are strangely out in the calculating of their own interest. South.

Very seldom out, in these his guesses. Addison.

6. Not in the position to score in playing a game; not in the state or turn of the play for counting or gaining scores.

7. Out of fashion; unfashionable; no longer in current vogue; unpopular.

Out is largely used in composition as a prefix, with the same significations that it has as a separate word; as outbound, outbreak, outbuilding, outcome, outdo, outdoor, outfield. See also the first Note under Over, adv.

Day in, day out, from the beginning to the limit of each of several days; day by day; every day. -- Out at, Out in, Out on, etc., elliptical phrases, that to which out refers as a source, origin, etc., being omitted; as, out (of the house and) at the barn; out (of the house, road, fields, etc., and) in the woods.

Three fishers went sailing out into the west,
Out into the west, as the sun went down.
C. Kingsley.

In these lines after out may be understood, “of the harbor,” “from the shore,” “of sight,” or some similar phrase. The complete construction is seen in the saying: “Out of the frying pan into the fire.”

-- Out from, a construction similar to out of (below). See Of and From. -- Out of, a phrase which may be considered either as composed of an adverb and a preposition, each having its appropriate office in the sentence, or as a compound preposition. Considered as a preposition, it denotes, with verbs of movement or action, from the interior of; beyond the limit: from; hence, origin, source, motive, departure, separation, loss, etc.; -- opposed to in or into; also with verbs of being, the state of being derived, removed, or separated from. Examples may be found in the phrases below, and also under Vocabulary words; as, out of breath; out of countenance. -- Out of cess, beyond measure, excessively. Shak. -- Out of character, unbecoming; improper. -- Out of conceit with, not pleased with. See under Conceit. -- Out of date, not timely; unfashionable; antiquated. -- Out of door, Out of doors, beyond the doors; from the house; not inside a building; in, or into, the open air; hence, figuratively, shut out; dismissed. See under Door, also, Out-of-door, Outdoor, Outdoors, in the Vocabulary. “He 's quality, and the question's out of door,” Dryden. -- Out of favor, disliked; under displeasure. -- Out of frame, not in correct order or condition; irregular; disarranged. Latimer. -- Out of hand, immediately; without delay or preparation; without hesitation or debate; as, to dismiss a suggestion out of hand. “Ananias . . . fell down and died out of hand.” Latimer. -- Out of harm's way, beyond the danger limit; in a safe place. -- Out of joint, not in proper connection or adjustment; unhinged; disordered. “The time is out of joint.” Shak. -- Out of mind, not in mind; forgotten; also, beyond the limit of memory; as, time out of mind. -- Out of one's head, beyond commanding one's mental powers; in a wandering state mentally; delirious. [Colloq.] -- Out of one's time, beyond one's period of minority or apprenticeship. -- Out of order, not in proper order; disarranged; in confusion. -- Out of place, not in the usual or proper place; hence, not proper or becoming. -- Out of pocket, in a condition of having expended or lost more money than one has received. -- Out of print, not in market, the edition printed being exhausted; -- said of books, pamphlets, etc. -- Out of the question, beyond the limits or range of consideration; impossible to be favorably considered. -- Out of reach, beyond one's reach; inaccessible. -- Out of season, not in a proper season or time; untimely; inopportune. -- Out of sorts, wanting certain things; unsatisfied; unwell; unhappy; cross. See under Sort, n. -- Out of temper, not in good temper; irritated; angry. -- Out of time, not in proper time; too soon, or too late. -- Out of time, not in harmony; discordant; hence, not in an agreeing temper; fretful. -- Out of twist, Out of winding, or Out of wind, not in warped condition; perfectly plain and smooth; -- said of surfaces. -- Out of use, not in use; unfashionable; obsolete. -- Out of the way. (a) On one side; hard to reach or find; secluded. (b) Improper; unusual; wrong. -- Out of the woods, not in a place, or state, of obscurity or doubt; free from difficulty or perils; safe. [Colloq.] -- Out to out, from one extreme limit to another, including the whole length, breadth, or thickness; -- applied to measurements. -- Out West, in or towards, the West; specifically, in some Western State or Territory. [U. S.] -- To come out, To cut out, To fall out, etc. See under Come, Cut, Fall, etc. -- To make out See to make out under make, v. t. and v. i.. -- To put out of the way, to kill; to destroy. -- Week in, week out. See Day in, day out (above).

OutOut (out), n.
1. One who, or that which, is out; especially, one who is out of office; -- generally in the plural.

2. A place or space outside of something; a nook or corner; an angle projecting outward; an open space; -- chiefly used in the phrase ins and outs; as, the ins and outs of a question. See under In.

3. (Print.) A word or words omitted by the compositor in setting up copy; an omission.

To make an out (Print.), (a) to omit something, in setting or correcting type, which was in the copy. (b) (Baseball) to be put out in one's turn at bat, such as to strike out, to ground out, or to fly out.

OutOut, v. t.
1. To cause to be out; to eject; to expel.

A king outed from his country. Selden.

The French have been outed of their holds. Heylin.

2. To come out with; to make known. [Obs.] Chaucer.

3. To give out; to dispose of; to sell. [Obs.] Chaucer.

OutOut, v. i. To come or go out; to get out or away; to become public. “Truth will out.” Shak.

OutOut, interj. Expressing impatience, anger, a desire to be rid of; -- with the force of command; go out; begone; away; off.

Out, idle words, servants to shallow fools! Shak.

Out upon! or Out on! equivalent to “shame upon!” “away with!” as, out upon you!

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Definiciones (más)

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Locuções

Out-Migration • Out-of-Frame Deletion • Out-of-Frame Insertion • Out-of-Frame Mutation • Out-of-Hours Medical Care • Out-of-work • Out-patients • out and away • out cold • out cuts • out file • out for the count • out front • out in • out loud • out of • out of action • out of bounds • out of breath • out of commission • out of condition • out of control • out of date • out of doors • out of earshot • out of fashion • out of focus • out of gear • out of hand • out of harm's way • out of it • out of joint • out of line • out of luck • out of mind • out of nothing • out of one's mind • out of order • out of place • out of play • out of position • out of practice • out of print • out of reach • out of season • out of service • out of shape • out of sight • out of sight, out of mind • out of sorts • out of spite • out of step • out of stock • out of style • out of the blue • out of the frying pan, into the fire • out of the frying-pan into the fire • out of the habit of • out of the ordinary • out of the question • out of the way • out of the wood(s) • out of the/someone's way • out of thin air • out of this world • out of touch • out of true • out of tune • out of turn • out of use • out of view • out of wedlock • out of whack • out of work • out on a limb • out on the tiles • out or keeping • out takes • out to • out-and-out • out-and-outer • out-basket • out-herod • out-migration • out-of-body experience • out-of-bounds • out-of-court settlement • out-of-date • out-of-door • out-of-doors • out-of-pocket • out-of-school • out-of-the-box thinking • out-of-the-way • out-of-town • out-of-work • out-patient • out-patient clinic • out-patient's • out-tray

...And Out Come the Wolves • 7-Eleven Speak Out Wireless • 8 out of 10 Cats • A Fever You Can't Sweat Out • A Fish out of Water (Family Guy) • A Night Out • A Night Out (film) • A World Out of Time • A.out • All Mapped Out • All Out War (album) • An American Paradox (Strung Out album) • As I Went Out One Morning • Big Day Out • Big Gay Out • Blood In Blood Out • Blow Out (TV series) • Boys Night Out • Boys Night Out (band) • Breaking Out Is Hard to Do • Bug-out bag • Bustin' Out of L Seven • Butt Out • Check-Out • Chicken Out Rotisserie • Child time-out • Chill Out (Black Uhuru album) • Chill-out music • Cleanin' Out My Closet • Coming out • Counting-out game • Crowd-out effect • Cut out (filmmaking) • Dig Me Out • Down and Out in Paris and London • Down and out • Drac's Night Out • Drop out • Dropping out • Dykes to Watch Out For • Earn out • Easy Way Out • Ego Tripping Out • Every Man out of His Humour • Exile In Oblivion (Strung Out album) • Fall Out (The Prisoner) • Fan-out • Far Out Man • Fever in Fever Out • Fibre Channel time out values • Figured You Out • Fish Out of Water (album) • Fish Out of Water (song) • Flame out • Fourteen Out • Freak Out • Freak Out (ride) • Freak Out, It's Ben Kweller • Freak out • Freakin' Out • Freakin' Out / All Over Me • Garbage In, Garbage Out • Get Out (board game) • Get Out You Damned One • Get Out of My Room • Get Out, You Damned One • Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! • Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! The Rolling Stones in Concert • Gross-out film • Hide-Out • I'm Coming Out • Inside Out (band) • Inside Wants Out • Is There Anybody Out There? • Kaleidoscope World (Swing Out Sister album) • Kicked Out of Hell • Knock out • Knock-out mouse • Knocked Out Loaded • Lights Out (UFO album) • Lights Out (radio show) • Live It Out • Live in a Dive (Strung Out album) • Live! Tonight! Sold Out!! • Look Out East • Maggie Out • Make a mountain out of a molehill • Making Out • Military Families Speak Out • Miss and Out • Must Get Out • Mustering-out Payment Act • National Night Out • No One Here Gets Out Alive • No Way Out (1987 movie) • No Way Out (album) • Not out • Operation Drive Out Trash • Out (cricket) • Out (poker) • Out All Night • Out Hud • Out Of Body Experiences • Out Spaced • Out There (Australian TV series) • Out for Justice • Out from the Deep • Out haul • Out magazine • Out of Africa (film) • Out of Darkness • Out of Gas • Out of Mind (Stargate SG-1) • Out of My Mind (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) • Out of Nothing • Out of Practice • Out of School Care and Recreation • Out of Season • Out of Step (album) • Out of Time (2003 film) • Out of Time (movie) • Out of order execution • Out of the Blue (1979 TV series) • Out of the Cellar • Out of the Dark (Into the Light) • Out of the Darkness (film) • Out of the Dust • Out of the Everywhere and Other Extraordinary Visions • Out of the Past • Out of the Silent Planet (album) • Out of the Unknown • Out of the Valley • Out of the Wilderness • Out ta Get Me • Out to Lunch • Out to Lunch! • Out to Sea • Out to Win • Out-haul • Out-of-State Plates • Out-of-band signaling • Out-of-body experience • Out-of-place artifact • Psych-Out • Reach out of the Darkness • Retired out • Right Out of the Blue • Rosalita (Come Out Tonight) • Running out the clock • School's Out (album) • School's Out (film) • She's Out of My Life • Shoot Out the Lights • Shout Out Louds • Singled Out (Diesel album) • Sold-Out Software • Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash • Spacing Out • Spin out • St Cuthbert Out • Starting Out • Stay Out of Order • Street Spirit (Fade Out) • Stretchin' Out in Bootsy's Rubber Band • Strike Out • Strung Out Again • Strung Out in Heaven • Super Punch-Out • TV out chipsets • TV-out • Tagged out • Take Me Out to the Ball Game • Take Me Out to the Ballgame • Tap out • Tape-out • Tapes, Breaks and Out-Takes • Thank You Good Night Sold Out • The Chill Out Project • The Good Will Out • The In Sound From Way Out! (Beastie Boys album) • The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia • The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia (film) • The Process of Weeding Out • The Secret Hide-Out • The Shadow Out of Time • The Who Sell Out • The Woods Out Back • There Is a Light That Never Goes Out • Time Out of Joint • Time Out with Britney Spears • Topping out • Two-out-of-five code • Up, Bustle and Out • Waterloo/Watch Out • Way Out West (song) • Ways to be out in cricket • When the Lights Go Out • White out • Wild 'n Out

Dicionario analógico


out

faraway, far-off[Similaire]



out

open[ClasseHyper.]

qualificatif d'un bien (fr)[DomaineDescription]

entreprise (fr)[DomaineDescription]








out (adj.)

dead[Similaire]



out (adj.)

outer[Similaire]


out (adj.)


out (adj.)


out (adj.)

outgoing[Similaire]




out (adj.)

safe[Ant.]


out (adj.)

unsuccessful[Similaire]



out (adv.)

aloud; out loud[ClasseHyper.]



out (n.)

failure[Hyper.]




Wikipedia

Out

                   

Out may refer to:

Contents

  Media

  Sports and recreation

  • Out (baseball), play which retires the batter or a base runner
  • Out (cricket), the loss of a wicket by a batsman; also known as "dismissal"
  • Out (poker), unseen card which is expected to win a hand, if drawn
  • Out (route), a pattern run by a receiver in American football

  Sexuality

  • Coming out or coming out of the closet, publicly revealing one's own LGBT status
  • Outing, publicly revealing someone else's LGBT status
  • Out (magazine), American publication aimed at a homosexual readership
  • Out (website), community website for gay men and women around the world

  Other

  See also

   
               

 

todas as traduções do outs


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