leaving+out

  • 51Out-Ranger of Windsor Forest — The Out Ranger of Windsor Forest was an official post associated with the royal forest of Windsor. The nominal duties of the out ranger were to preserve any deer which escaped the bounds of Windsor Forest.[1] (Under forest law, the Sovereign… …

    Wikipedia

  • 52out of house and home — adverb In a manner that deprives one of dwelling or some aspect thereof. Poets will drink you out of house and home / leaving your living room in disarray See Also: eat one out of house and home …

    Wiktionary

  • 53out-of-body experience — /ˌaʊt əv bɒdi əksˈpɪəriəns/ (say .owt uhv bodee uhks pearreeuhns) noun an experience, which some people have reported having, of leaving one s body while able to observe all attendant circumstances, and in some cases, to travel to other places… …

  • 54out·ta — /ˈaʊtə/ used in writing to represent the sound of the phrase out of when it is spoken quickly Get outta my way! I m outta here in half an hour. [=I m leaving in half an hour] ◇ The pronunciation represented by outta is common in informal speech.… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 55out-of-the-body experience — a form of derealization in which there is a sensation of leaving one s body and visions of travelling through tunnels into light or of journeys on another plane of existence. It typically occurs after anaesthesia or severe illness and is often… …

    Medical dictionary

  • 56leaving — Synonyms and related words: AWOL, French leave, abandonment, abscondence, absence, absence without leave, absentation, absenteeism, absenting, casting away, cessation, cut, day off, decampment, default, departure, desuetude, disappearance, disuse …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 57out of here — Australian Slang leaving: I m outta here, see ya tomorrow …

    English dialects glossary

  • 58out of here — (outa here) going, leaving    When I get paid, I m outa here …

    English idioms

  • 59out-of-the-body experience — a form of derealization in which there is a sensation of leaving one s body and visions of travelling through tunnels into light or of journeys on another plane of existence. It typically occurs after anaesthesia or severe illness and is often… …

    The new mediacal dictionary

  • 60To cut out — Cut Cut (k[u^]t), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Cut}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Cutting}.] [OE. cutten, kitten, ketten; prob. of Celtic origin; cf. W. cwtau to shorten, curtail, dock, cwta bobtailed, cwt tail, skirt, Gael. cutaich to shorten, curtail, dock, cutach …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English