Out
121out — adv. RG. 546 prep. ‘out of.’ RG. 547 …
122out of — see out …
123out- — [[t]a͟ʊt [/t]] PREFIX You can use out to form verbs that describe an action as being done better by one person than by another. For example, if you can outswim someone, you can swim further or faster than they can. European investors may outspend …
124out of it — not a concern, not part of the issue, not of importance adj. (Slang) not keeping up with times ( My mom is so old, she is out of it ); disoriented …
125out of it — not feeling right, not with it For some reason, I m out of it today. I have no energy …
126out of — have none left The restaurant was out of fish so we had meat instead …
127out of it — informal 1》 not included. 2》 unaware of what is happening. ↘Brit. drunk. → out …
128out of — 1》 from (a place or source). 2》 not having (something). → out …