out
111out of it — adjective a) Not participating in some trend or group. When my old friends turned up, my wife felt quite out of it. b) Disoriented; not thinking clearly. Having the flu all week left me pretty well out of it …
112out of — preposition a) From the inside to the outside of. The audience came out of the theater. b) Having emerged from. The cat is out of the bag Syn: exterior, external …
113out — altmodisch, aus der Mode [gekommen], gestrig, rückschrittlich, rückständig, überholt, unmodern, unzeitgemäß, veraltet, verzopft; (bildungsspr.): anachronistisch; (ugs.): angestaubt, aus der Mottenkiste, aus Omas Klamottenkiste, hinter dem Mond,… …
114out — [OE] Out is a widespread Germanic adverb (German aus, Dutch uit, Swedish ut, and Danish ud are its first cousins) which also has a relative on the far side of the Indo European language area, Sanskrit ud ‘out’. Its former comparative form still… …
115out of it — adj euphoric and/or semi conscious after ingesting drink or drugs. A fashionable shortened version of out of one s head/ skull/box which spread from the USA to other English speaking areas around 1971. ► Her main hobby these days seems to be… …
116out of — have no more, have none, run out Stop at the bakery, please. We re out of bread …
117out- — UK [aʊt] / US prefix 1) bigger, better, longer etc: used with many verbs outclass outnumber outshine 2) outside, or away from: used with many nouns and adjectives outdoor outbuilding outflow 3) used for forming nouns and adjectives from verbs… …
118out- — aff. a prefixal use of out, occurring in various senses in compounds (outcast; outcome; outside), and serving also to form transitive verbs denoting a going beyond, surpassing, or outdoing of the particular action indicated (outbid; outdo;… …
119Out — Die ersten neun Löcher eines 18 Löcher Kurses werden als die out nine bezeichnet, weil man da ja noch hinausspielt, während man auf den zweiten Neun von den in nine spricht man befindet sich wieder auf dem Heimweg. Als out bezeichnet man auch… …
120out — [OE] Out is a widespread Germanic adverb (German aus, Dutch uit, Swedish ut, and Danish ud are its first cousins) which also has a relative on the far side of the Indo European language area, Sanskrit ud ‘out’. Its former comparative form still… …