Out+of

  • 71out of — {prep.} 1a. From the inside to the outside of. * /John took the apple out of the bag./ * /Get out of the car!/ * /The teacher has gone out of town./ 1b. In a place away from. * /No, you can t see Mr. Jones; he is out of the office today./ * /Our… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 72out\ of — prep. 1a. From the inside to the outside of. John took the apple out of the bag. Get out of the car! The teacher has gone out of town. 1b. In a place away from. No, you can t see Mr. Jones; he is out of the office today. Our house is ten miles… …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 73out — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adv. without, outside; outdoors; démodé. See exterior, disuse. II (Roget s IV) modif. & prep. 1. [In motion from within] Syn. out of, away from, from, from within, out from, out toward, outward, on the… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 74out — 1. adverb /aʊt,ʌʊt/ a) Away from home or ones usual place, or not indoors. Lets eat out tonight b) Away from; at a distance. Leave a message with my secretary if Im out when you call. Syn …

    Wiktionary

  • 75out — adj., adv. unconscious 1) out cold ( completely unconscious ) intent on 2) out to + inf. (she is out to get revenge) gone 3) out to (out to lunch) misc. 4) over and out (used at the end of a radio message); to turn smt. inside out; down and out ( …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 76out — {{11}}out (adv.) O.E. ut, common Germanic (Cf. O.N., O.Fris., Goth. ut, Du. uit, Ger. aus), from PIE root *ud up, up away (Cf. Skt. ut up, out, uttarah higher, upper, later, northern; Avestan uz up, out, O.Ir. ud out …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 77out — adverb 1》 moving away from a place, especially from one that is enclosed to one that is open.     ↘outdoors.     ↘no longer in prison. 2》 situated far or at a particular distance from somewhere: a farm out in the middle of nowhere.     ↘to sea,… …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 78out — adv 1. absent, abroad, away, elsewhere, gone, not at home, forth; flown, missing, not present. 2. outside, out of doors, without, beyond. 3. passe , antiquated, out of date, fallen into disuse, disused; obsolete, archaic, extinct; antique,… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 79out of — preposition Date: before 12th century 1. a. (1) used as a function word to indicate direction or movement from within to the outside of < walked out of the room > (2) used as a function word to indicate a change in quality, state, or form < woke&#8230; …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 80Out(Fn) — In mathematics, Out(Fn) is the outer automorphism group of a free group on n generators. These groups play an important role in geometric group theory. Contents 1 Outer space 1.1 Definition 1.2 Connection to length fun …

    Wikipedia