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单词 out-of-the-way
释义

out (see also out-) /owt/

adverb
  1. (shading into adj predicatively), not within
  2. Forth
  3. To, towards, or at the exterior or a position away from the inside or inner part or from anything thought of as enclosing, hiding or obscuring
  4. From among others
  5. From the mass
  6. Beyond bounds
  7. Away from the original or normal position or state
  8. At or towards the far end, or a remote position
  9. Seawards
  10. Not within, or away from, one's dwelling, work premises, etc
  11. In or into the open air
  12. In or into a state of exclusion or removal
  13. Not in office
  14. Not in use or fashion
  15. Debarred, not to be considered
  16. No longer in the game
  17. No longer in as a batsman, dismissed
  18. Not batting
  19. Out of the contest and unable to resume in time
  20. In the condition of having won
  21. Away from the mark
  22. At fault
  23. In error
  24. Not in form or good condition
  25. At a loss
  26. In or into a disconcerted, perplexed or disturbed state
  27. In or into an unconscious state
  28. Not in harmony or amity
  29. In distribution
  30. In or into the hands of others or the public
  31. On loan
  32. To or at an end
  33. In an exhausted or extinguished state
  34. Completely
  35. Thoroughly
  36. Subjected to loss
  37. In or to the field
  38. In quest of or expressly aiming at something
  39. In rebellion
  40. On strike
  41. In an exposed state
  42. No longer in concealment or obscurity
  43. In or into the state of having openly declared one's homosexuality
  44. In or into the open
  45. Before the public
  46. In or into society (old)
  47. On domestic service (archaic)
  48. In existence
  49. At full length
  50. In an expanded state
  51. In bloom
  52. In extension
  53. Loudly and clearly
  54. Forcibly
  55. Unreservedly
adjective
  1. External
  2. Outlying
  3. Remote
  4. Played away from home
  5. Outwards
  6. Not batting
  7. Exceeding the usual
  8. In any condition expressed by the adverb out
noun
  1. A projection or outward bend (as in outs and ins)
  2. A way out, a way of escape
  3. Someone who is out
  4. An instance of putting a player out (baseball)
  5. That which is outside
  6. An omission in setting type (printing)
  7. A paying out, esp (in pl) rates and taxes, etc (dialect)
  8. An outing (dialect)
  9. A disadvantage, drawback (US)
  10. Permission to go out (US)
preposition
  1. Forth from (informal or N American)
  2. Outside of (now rare)
  3. Without (obsolete)
transitive verb
  1. To put out or throw out
  2. To knock out
  3. To make public the homosexuality of (a person in public life) without his or her permission (informal)
  4. To make public any facts about (a person in public life) that he or she does not wish to be revealed (informal)
intransitive verb
  1. To surface, be revealed, emerge publicly, as in truth will out
  2. To go out (informal)
  3. (with with) to bring out (archaic or dialect)
  4. (with with) to say suddenly or unexpectedly (informal)
interjection
  1. Expressing peremptory dismissal
  2. Announcing that a player is out, the ball not in court, etc
  3. Indicating that one has come to the end of one's transmission (radio)
  4. Alas (archaic)
  5. Shame (usu out upon; archaic)
ORIGIN: OE ūte, ūt; Gothic ut, Ger aus, Sans ud

outˈed adjective

  1. Having had private facts about oneself made public (informal)
  2. Ejected

outˈer noun

Someone who makes public another person's homosexuality

outˈing noun see separate entry

outˈness noun

  1. The state of being out
  2. Externality to the perceiving mind, objectiveness

out'ro noun (pl out'ros)

The concluding section of a song, TV programme, etc

outˈ-and-out adjective

  1. Thoroughgoing
  2. Thorough-paced
  3. Utter
  4. Absolute
  5. Unqualified

adverb /owt-ənd-owtˈ/

  1. Finally and completely
  2. Definitely
  3. Unreservedly

out-and-outˈer noun (informal)

  1. Any person or thing that is a complete or extreme type
  2. A thorough-going partisan
  3. A great lie

outˈ-box noun (computing)

A file for storing electronic mail that has been or is to be sent to another computer

out-of-doorsˈ adjective

  1. (also out-of-doorˈ) open-air, outdoor (see out-)
  2. Outside of parliament

noun

The open air

out-of(-the)-bodˈy adjective

Of or relating to an occurrence in which an individual has the experience of being outside his or her own body

out-of-the-wayˈ adjective

  1. Uncommon, unusual
  2. Singular
  3. Secluded
  4. Remote

out-of-townˈ adjective

(of a retail outlet) situated away from a main commercial centre

out-oˈver or out-owre /owt-owrˈ or oot-owrˈ/ adverb and preposition (Scot)

  1. Out over
  2. Over

outˈ-tray noun

A shallow container for letters, etc, ready to be dispatched

at outs (US)

At odds

from out

Out from

murder will out see under murder

on the outs (with) (informal)

  1. On unfriendly terms (with)
  2. Becoming unpopular, unfashionable, etc

out and about

  1. Able to go out, convalescent
  2. Active out of doors

out and away (old)

  1. By far
  2. Beyond competition

out at elbow see elbow

out for

  1. Abroad in quest of
  2. Aiming at obtaining or achieving
  3. Dismissed from batting with a score of

out from under

Out of a difficult situation

out of

  1. From within
  2. From among
  3. Not in
  4. Not within
  5. Excluded from
  6. From (a source, material, motive, condition, possession, language, etc)
  7. Born of
  8. Beyond the bounds, range or scope of
  9. Deviating from, in disagreement with
  10. Away or distant from
  11. Without, destitute or denuded of

out of character see under character

out of course (rare)

Out of order

out of date

  1. Not abreast of the times
  2. Old-fashioned
  3. Obsolete
  4. No longer valid
  5. No longer current (out-of-dateˈ adjective)

out of doors

In or to the open air

out of it

  1. Excluded from participation
  2. Without a chance
  3. Unable to behave normally or control oneself, usually because of drink or drugs (slang)

out of joint see under join

out of place see under place

out of pocket see under pocket

out of print see under print

out of sight see under sight1

out of sorts see under sort

out of temper see under temper

out of the question see under question

out of the way

Not in the way, not impeding or preventing progress

out of this world see under world

out of time see under time

out of work see under work

out on one's feet

  1. As good as knocked out
  2. Done for, but with a semblance of carrying on

outs and ins see ins and outs under in1

out there

  1. In existence
  2. Unconventional, avant-garde (informal)

out to

Aiming, working resolutely, to

out to lunch see under lunch

out to out

  1. In measurement from outside to outside
  2. Overall

out upon (archaic)

Shame on

out with

  1. Let's do away with
  2. Not friendly with
  3. See also out (vi) above

out with it! (informal)

Say what you have to say, and be quick about it, spit it out

way1 /wā/

noun
  1. Passage
  2. A road, street, track
  3. (with cap) used in street names
  4. Direction of motion
  5. The correct or desired route or path
  6. Length of space, distance (also in pl (informal, esp US))
  7. District
  8. Room or opportunity to advance
  9. Freedom of action, scope
  10. Manner of life
  11. Established routine
  12. Position, as in wrong way up, other way round, etc
  13. Condition, state
  14. Advance in life
  15. Normal or habitual course or conduct
  16. (in pl) a characteristic feature of behaviour, an idiosyncrasy
  17. Manner, style
  18. Method
  19. Means
  20. Course
  21. Respect
  22. Will
  23. Progress, forward motion, as in edge one's way, eat one's way through, etc
  24. Progress or motion through the water, headway (nautical)
  25. The direction of the weave, grain, etc
  26. (in pl) the machined surfaces of the top of a lathe bed on which the carriage slides, shears (engineering)
  27. (in pl) the framework of timbers on which a ship slides when being launched
intransitive verb (Spenser)

To journey

ORIGIN: OE weg; Ger Weg; related to Sans vahati he carries and to L vehere to carry, draw

wayˈless adjective

Without a path

way baggage noun (US)

Baggage to be laid down at a way station

wayˈbill noun

  1. A list of passengers and goods carried by a public vehicle
  2. A document giving details regarding goods sent by rail or road vehicle, etc
  3. A list of places to be visited on a journey

wayˈboard or weighˈboard noun (geology)

A thin stratum or seam separating thicker strata

wayˈbread noun (OE wegbræde, from brād broad, flat; dialect)

The common plantain

wayˈfare intransitive verb (archaic)

To travel, esp on foot

noun (archaic)

Travel, esp on foot

wayˈfarer noun

A traveller, esp on foot

wayˈfaring noun and adjective

wayfaring tree noun

Viburnum lantana, a large shrub with white flowers and berries that turn red and finally black, common in hedges

way freight noun

Freight for a way station

wayˈ-going noun and adjective (Scot)

Departing

wayˈgone adjective

Exhausted by travelling

waylayˈ transitive verb (waylayˈing; waylaidˈ)

  1. To lie in ambush for
  2. To attack or seize on the way
  3. To lie in wait for in order to converse with
  4. To obstruct or intercept (obsolete)

waylayˈer noun

wayˈleave noun

Permission to pass over another's ground or property

wayˈ-maker noun

  1. A pioneer
  2. A precursor

wayˈmark noun

  1. A signpost
  2. Something that serves as a guide to a traveller

transitive verb

To mark out (a path, etc) with guideposts, signs, etc

way of life noun

  1. The style or conditions in which a person lives
  2. The living of one's life according to certain principles

Way of the Cross noun

  1. A series of pictorial representations of the stages of Christ's progress to Calvary
  2. Devotions practised in connection with these stages

way passenger noun

One picked up or set down at a way station or an intermediate point on a coach or bus route

way point noun

A point for stopping, changing course, etc, on a journey

wayˈpost noun

A guidepost

ways and means plural noun

  1. Resources
  2. Methods eg of raising money for the carrying on of government (Committee of Ways and Means the House of Commons sitting in the character of a committee to consider methods of raising money supplies; (in the USA) a permanent committee of the House of Representatives to which bills concerned with revenue are referred)

wayˈside noun

The border of a way, path or highway (fall by the wayside to fail or give up in one's attempt to do something; to drop out)

adjective

Growing, situated or lying near the wayside

way station noun (US)

An intermediate station between principal stations

way traffic noun (US)

Local traffic, as distinguished from through or express traffic

way train noun (US)

A train stopping at most of the stations on a line

way warden noun

A person appointed to supervise the upkeep of roads and footpaths in a district

wayˈwiser noun

An instrument for measuring distance travelled

wayˈworn adjective

Worn out by travel

across or over the way

On the other side of the street, etc

be by way of

To be supposed or alleged to be or be (doing, being, etc)

by or with someone's way of it (Scot)

According to someone's belief or assertion

by the way

  1. Incidentally
  2. While travelling
  3. Beside one's path

by way of

  1. Travelling through, via
  2. As if for the purpose of
  3. In character of, as a substitute for

come someone's way

To come within someone's experience or reach, to become attainable by someone

come or go someone's way

To come or go in the same direction as someone

divide three, etc, ways

To divide into three, etc portions

get or have one's or (one's own) way

To get or do what one wants

give way (to) see under give1

go all or the whole way (with) (informal)

To have sexual intercourse (with)

go one's own way

To act independently

go one's way

To depart

go out of the (or one's) way

  1. To give oneself trouble
  2. To make a special effort (to do something)

go someone's way

(of circumstances, etc) to favour someone

go the way of all flesh or all the earth

To die

have a way with

To be good at dealing with or managing (people, etc)

have a way with one

To have a fascinating personality or persuasive manner

have it both ways

(usu with a neg) to benefit from two actions, situations, arguments, etc, each of which excludes the possibility, validity, etc of the other

have it one's (or one's own) way

To do, think, etc what one pleases, with no regard for others' advice or opinions

have one's way

To carry one's point, get what one wants

have way (nautical)

(of a vessel) to be in motion

in a bad way

  1. In a serious condition
  2. Very upset

in a fair way to

Likely to succeed in

in a small (or big or large) way

On a petty (or a large or grandiose) scale

in a way

  1. To some extent
  2. From one point of view
  3. In a state of agitation or distress (old)

in his, etc way (or own way)

As far as his, etc individual merits go, leaving aside the disadvantageous aspects

in no way

Not at all

in the family way see under family

in the (or one's) way

  1. In one's path, impeding one's progress, creating an obstruction
  2. On the way

in the way of

  1. In a good position for effecting or attaining
  2. In the habit of (informal)
  3. In respect of

lead the way

To act as a guide or inspiration to others

look the other way

  1. To look away, sometimes deliberately in order not to see someone or something
  2. To take no notice esp of something calling for attention

lose the (or one's) way

To leave one's intended route by mistake and become lost

make one's way

  1. To move forward, sometimes with difficulty, to proceed
  2. To make good progress, achieve success

make way

  1. To make room
  2. To advance

no two ways about it

That is certain, there is no doubt about it

no way (informal)

Under no circumstances, absolutely not

one way and another

Considering various aspects

one way or the other

By any means possible

on the (or one's) way

  1. Moving towards a destination or event
  2. In progress
  3. At a point on one's journey

on the way out

Becoming unpopular, unfashionable, etc

out of the way

  1. So as not to hinder or obstruct
  2. Away from main routes, remote (out-of-the-wayˈ adjective)
  3. Dealt with, finished with
  4. In prison or dead and gone
  5. (usu with neg) out of the ordinary, unusual
  6. Lost, hidden (Shakespeare)

put someone in the way of

To contrive to make available to someone

take one's way

  1. To set out, proceed
  2. To follow one's own inclination or plan

the Way

The Christian Religion (from Bible, Acts 9.2, etc)

under way

  1. (of a vessel) in motion (also underway)
  2. Progressing

way to go (US inf)

An expression of praise or encouragement.

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