Stretch out
61Out (baseball) — A 1911 American Tobacco Company baseball card illustrating a baserunner being tagged out at third base. In baseball, an out occurs when the defensive, or fielding, team effects any of a number of different events, and the umpire rules a batter or …
62ˌstretch sth ˈout — phrasal verb same as stretch I stretched out a hand to touch her face.[/ex] …
63Out of India theory — Indo European topics Indo European languages (list) Albanian · Armenian · Baltic Celtic  …
64stretch one’s legs — tv. to stand up and perhaps walk about. □ I need to get out of here and stretch my legs for a while. □ Most of us stood up to stretch our legs at intermission …
65stretch your arm no further than your sleeve will reach — Do not spend more than you can afford. Similar to cut your coat according to your cloth. 1541 M. COVERDALE tr. H. Bullinger’s Christian State of Matrimony xix. Strech out thine arme no farther then thy sleve wyll retche. 1639 J. CLARKE… …
66stretch — v 1. extend, draw out, pull, tense, tauten; lengthen, elongate; widen, broaden; expand, enlarge, increase, amplify, aggrandize; distend, dilate, puff up, blow up, balloon, inflate. 2. offer, proffer, hold out, reach out, reach forth. 3. spread,… …
67out front — adverb leading or ahead in a competition the horse was three lengths ahead going into the home stretch ahead by two pawns our candidate is in the lead in the polls way out front in the race the advertising campaign put them out front in sales •… …
68reach out — stretch out one s hand; get in touch with …
69stretch — stretʃ n. act of stretching; condition of being stretched; large expanse; stretchiness, elasticity; duration of time; period of imprisonment v. draw out to the full length, extend, elongate; be extended; reach out; pull, make taut; strain; be… …
70reach something out — stretch out one s hand or arm. → reach …