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stick out
verb
to project or cause to project
informal(tr) to endure (something disagreeable) (esp in the phrase stick it out )
informalto be extremely obvious
(intr) to insist on (a demand), refusing to yield until it is met
the unions stuck out for a ten per cent wage rise
Idioms and Phrases
Also, stick out a mile or like a sore thumb . Be very prominent or conspicuous, as in Dad's funny hat made him stick out in the crowd , or That purple house sticks out a mile , or John's lie sticks out like a sore thumb . The first term dates from the mid-1500s, the variants from the first half of the 1900s. The variant using thumb alludes to the propensity for holding an injured thumb stiffly, making it stand out (and thereby risking further injury).
Continue doing something, endure something, as in I know you don't like it but you have to stick out the job for another month . [Late 1600s] A variant is stick it out , as in His new play's boring, but since he's my cousin we'd better stick it out . [Late 1800s] Also see stick it , def. 1.
Example Sentences
"There was something hard sticking out of the back of my leg and my leg was getting wet from blood," he told the BBC.
Her sparse, wiry-looking fur sticks out in all directions as if she'd stuck that bony middle finger in an electric socket.
In the video, a tool with a long piece of metal is sticking out of the suspect’s back pocket.
And one post-pardon case is already sticking out for sheer depravity.
You mentioned Julianne, and I just recently worked with her, so she really sticks out in my mind.
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