Nouns (9)
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out
n. a return or service that does not land within the in-bounds limits
out
n. (baseball) a failure by a batter or runner to reach a base safely in baseball; "you only get 3 outs per inning"
recoil, kick
n. the backward jerk of a gun when it is fired
kick, kicking
n. a rhythmic thrusting movement of the legs as in swimming or calisthenics; "the kick must be synchronized with the arm movements"; "the swimmer's kicking left a wake behind him"
kick, boot, kicking
n. the act of delivering a blow with the foot; "he gave the ball a powerful kick"; "the team's kicking was excellent"
Verbs (14)
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kick
v. drive or propel with the foot
kick
v. strike with the foot; "The boy kicked the dog"; "Kick the door down"
kick
v. make a goal; "He kicked the extra point after touchdown"
kick
v. kick a leg up
kick
v. thrash about or strike out with the feet
out
v. reveal (something) about somebody's identity or lifestyle; "The gay actor was outed last week"; "Someone outed a CIA agent"
out, come out
v. be made known; be disclosed or revealed; "The truth will out"
kick back, recoil, kick
v. spring back, as from a forceful thrust; "The gun kicked back into my shoulder"
come out of the closet, out, come out
v. to state openly and publicly one's homosexuality; "This actor outed last year"
Adverbs (5)
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out
adv. moving or appearing to move away from a place, especially one that is enclosed or hidden; "the cat came out from under the bed";
away, out
adv. from one's possession; "he gave out money to the poor"; "gave away the tickets"
out, away from home
adv. "They went out last night"
Adjectives (4)
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out
adj. outer or outlying; "the out islands"
out
adj. no longer fashionable; "that style is out these days"
out, unfashionable
adj. (unpopular)
Fuzzynyms (11)
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kick, kicking
n. a rhythmic thrusting movement of the legs as in swimming or calisthenics; "the kick must be synchronized with the arm movements"; "the swimmer's kicking left a wake behind him"
jerk
n. raising a weight from shoulder height to above the head by straightening the arms
recoil, kick
n. the backward jerk of a gun when it is fired
give the axe, give the bounce, give the gate
v. terminate a relationship abruptly; "Mary gave John the axe after she saw him with another woman"
inaugurate, usher in, introduce
v. be a precursor of; "The fall of the Berlin Wall ushered in the post-Cold War period"
Synonyms (19)
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outermost, outmost
adj. situated at the farthest possible point from a center
outside
adj. on or toward an outer edge; "an outer lane"; "the outside lane"
satellite
adj. surrounding and dominated by a central authority or power; "a city and its satellite communities"
antique, demode, ex, old-fashioned, old-hat(p), outmoded, passe, passee
adj. out of fashion; "a suit of rather antique appearance"; "demode (or outmoded) attire"; "outmoded ideas"
dated
adj. marked by features of the immediate and usually discounted past
dowdy, frumpy, frumpish
adj. primly out of date; "nothing so frumpish as last year's gambling game"
prehistoric
adj. no longer fashionable; "my mother has these prehistoric ideas about proper clothes"
disliked
adj. regarded with aversion; "he was intensely disliked"
less-traveled
adj. not visited by many travelers; "the tourist's desire to visit less-traveled countries"
Antonyms (2)
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in, inside an enclosed space
adv. to or toward the inside of; "come in"; "smash in the door"
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