51Թ

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View synonyms for

go out

verb

  1. to depart from a room, house, country, etc

  2. to cease to illuminate, burn, or function

    the fire has gone out

  3. to cease to be fashionable or popular

    that style went out ages ago!

  4. to become unconscious or fall asleep

    she went out like a light

  5. (of a broadcast) to be transmitted

  6. to go to entertainments, social functions, etc

  7. to associate (with a person of the opposite sex) regularly; date

  8. (of workers) to begin to strike

  9. (foll by to) to be extended (to)

    our sympathy went out to her on the death of her sister

  10. cards to get rid of the last card, token, etc, in one's hand

  11. to make a great effort to achieve or obtain something

    he went all out to pass the exam

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Idioms and Phrases

Be extinguished, as in All the lights went out . [c. 1400]

Die; also, faint. For example, I want to go out before I become senile , or At the sight of blood he went out like a light . The first usage dates from about 1700 and was at first put go out of the world . For the variant, see under out cold .

Take part in social life outside the home, as in We go out a lot during the holiday season . This usage dates from the second half of the 1700s and gave rise to go out with someone , meaning “to date someone.”

Stop working, as in To show their support of the auto workers, the steel workers went out too . This expression is short for go out on strike . [Late 1800s]

Become unfashionable, as in Bell-bottom pants went out in the 1970s but made a comeback in the 1990s. This usage is sometimes amplified to go out of fashion or go out of style , as in This kind of film has gone out of fashion , or These boots are going out of style . [Late 1400s]

Cease to function as before. This sense appears in go out of print , said of a book that will no longer be printed. Also see the subsequent idioms beginning with go out .

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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

A mobile alert went out to Minneapolis area residents warning them to "shelter in place."

From

Melendez said he heard they were going out to other locations in the city, too.

From

"Fewer people are going out for trips, and they buy less from me," says Óscar, who comes from the Mexican state of Tlaxcala and, while undocumented himself, has children who were born in the US.

From

He had gone out to deliver lunch boxes in other hostels around the city.

From

“If we don’t go out to work, how do we cover our expenses?” he asked.

From

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