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get out

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Financial, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.03 sec.
get  (gt)
v. got (gt), got·ten (gtn) or got, get·ting, gets
v.tr.
1.
a. To come into possession or use of; receive: got a cat for her birthday.
b. To meet with or incur: got nothing but trouble for her efforts.
2.
a. To go after and obtain: got a book at the library; got breakfast in town.
b. To go after and bring: Get me a pillow.
c. To purchase; buy: get groceries.
3.
a. To acquire as a result of action or effort: He got his information from the Internet. You can't get water out of a stone.
b. To earn: got high marks in math.
c. To accomplish or attain as a result of military action.
4. To obtain by concession or request: couldn't get the time off; got permission to go.
5.
a. To arrive at; reach: When did you get home?
b. To reach and board; catch: She got her plane two minutes before takeoff.
6. To succeed in communicating with, as by telephone: can't get me at the office until nine.
7. To become affected with (an illness, for example) by infection or exposure; catch: get the flu; got the mumps.
8.
a. To be subjected to; undergo: got a severe concussion.
b. To receive as retribution or punishment: got six years in prison for tax fraud.
c. To sustain a stated injury to: got my arm broken.
9.
a. To gain or have understanding of: Do you get this question?
b. To learn (a poem, for example) by heart; memorize.
c. To find or reach by calculating: get a total; can't get the answer.
d. To perceive by hearing: I didn't get your name when we were introduced.
10. To procreate; beget.
11.
a. To cause to become or be in a specified state or condition: got the children tired and cross; got the shirt clean.
b. To make ready; prepare: get lunch for a crowd.
c. To cause to come or go: got the car through traffic.
d. To cause to move or leave: Get me out of here!
12. To cause to undertake or perform; prevail on: got the guide to give us the complete tour.
13.
a. To take, especially by force; seize: The detective got the suspect as he left the restaurant.
b. Informal To overcome or destroy: The ice storm got the rose bushes.
c. To evoke an emotional response or reaction in: Romantic music really gets me.
d. To annoy or irritate: What got me was his utter lack of initiative.
e. To present a difficult problem to; puzzle.
f. To take revenge on, especially to kill in revenge for a wrong.
g. Informal To hit or strike: She got him on the chin. The bullet got him in the arm.
14. Baseball To put out.
15. To begin or start. Used with the present participle: I have to get working on this or I'll miss my deadline.
16.
a. To have current possession of. Used in the present perfect form with the meaning of the present: We've got plenty of cash.
b. Nonstandard To have current possession of. Used in the past tense form with the meaning of the present: They got a nice house in town.
c. To have as an obligation. Used in the present perfect form with the meaning of the present: I have got to leave early. You've got to do the dishes.
d. Nonstandard To have as an obligation. Used in the past tense with the meaning of the present: I got to git me a huntin' dog.
v.intr.
1.
a. To become or grow to be: eventually got well.
b. To be successful in coming or going: When will we get to Dallas?
2. To be able or permitted: never got to see Europe; finally got to work at home.
3.
a. To be successful in becoming: get free of a drug problem.
b. Used with the past participle of transitive verbs as a passive voice auxiliary: got stung by a bee.
c. To become drawn in, entangled, or involved: got into debt; get into a hassle.
4. Informal To depart immediately: yelled at the dog to get.
5. To work for gain or profit; make money: puts all his energy into getting and spending.
n.
1.
a. The act of begetting.
b. Progeny; offspring.
2. Chiefly British Slang A foolish or contemptible person.
3. Sports A return, as in tennis, on a shot that seems impossible to reach.
Phrasal Verbs:
get about
To be out of bed and beginning to walk again, as after an illness.
get across
1. To make understandable or clear: tried to get my point across.
2. To be convincing or understandable: How can I get across to the students?
get after
To urge or scold: You should get after them to mow the lawn.
get along
1. To be or continue to be on harmonious terms: gets along with the in-laws.
2. To manage or fare with reasonable success: can't get along on those wages.
3.
a. To make progress.
b. To advance, especially in years.
4. To go away; leave.
get around
1. To circumvent or evade: managed to get around the real issues.
2. Informal To convince or win over by flattering or cajoling.
3. To travel from place to place: It is hard to get around without a car.
4. To become known; circulate: Word got around.
get at
1. To touch or reach successfully: The cat hid where we couldn't get at it.
2. To try to make understandable; hint at or suggest: I don't know what you're getting at.
3. To discover or understand: tried to get at the cause of the problem.
4. Informal To bribe or influence by improper or illegal means: He got at the judge, and the charges were dismissed.
get away
1. To break free; escape.
2. To leave or go away: wanted to come along, but couldn't get away.
get back
To return to a person, place, or condition: getting back to the subject.
get by
1. To pass or outstrip.
2. To succeed at a level of minimal acceptibility or with the minimal amount of effort: just got by in college.
3. To succeed in managing; survive: We'll get by if we economize.
4. To be unnoticed or ignored by: The mistake got by the editor, but the proofreader caught it.
get down
1. To descend.
2. To give one's attention. Often used with to: Let's get down to work.
3. To exhaust, discourage, or depress: The heat was getting me down.
4. To swallow: got the pill down on the first try.
5. To describe in writing.
6. Informal To lose one's inhibitions; enjoy oneself wholeheartedly.
get in
1.
a. To enter.
b. To arrive: We got in late last night.
2. To become or cause to become involved: She got in with the wrong crowd. Repeated loans from the finance company got me deeper in debt.
3. To become accepted, as in a club.
4. To succeed in making or doing: got in six deliveries before noon.
get into
1. To become involved in: got into trouble by stealing cars.
2. Informal To be interested in: got into gourmet cooking.
get off
1. To start, as on a trip; leave.
2.
a. To fire (a round of ammunition, for example): got off two shots before the deer disappeared.
b. To write and send, as a letter.
3. To escape, as from punishment or danger: got off scot-free.
4. To obtain a release or lesser penalty for: The attorney got her client off with a slap on the wrist.
5. Slang To act or speak with effrontery. Used in the imperative to express contempt or disdainful disbelief.
6. Slang To have an orgasm.
7. Slang
a. To feel great pleasure or gratification.
b. To experience euphoria, for example, as a result of taking a drug.
8. To get permission to leave one's workplace: got off early and went fishing.
get on
1. To be or continue on harmonious terms: gets on well with the neighbors.
2. To manage or fare with reasonable success.
3.
a. To make progress; continue: get on with a performance.
b. To advance in years.
4. To acquire understanding or knowledge: got on to the con game.
get out
1.
a. To leave or escape.
b. To cause to leave or escape.
2. To become known: Somehow the secret got out.
3. To publish, as a newspaper.
get over
1. To prevail against; overcome.
2. To recover from: finally got over the divorce.
3. To get across.
get through
1. To arrive at the end of; finish or complete.
2.
a. To succeed in making contact; reach.
b. To make oneself understood.
get to
1.
a. To begin. Used with the present participle: got to reminiscing.
b. To start to deal with: didn't get to the housework until Sunday.
2. To influence or affect, especially adversely: The noise really gets to me.
get together
1. To bring together; gather.
2. To come together.
3. To arrive at an agreement.
get up
1.
a. To arise from bed or rise to one's feet.
b. To climb.
2. To act as the creator or organizer of: got up a petition against rezoning.
3. To dress or adorn: She got herself up in a bizarre outfit.
4. To find within oneself: got up the nerve to quit.
Idioms:
get around to
To find the time or occasion for.
get away with
To escape the consequences of (a blameworthy act, for example): got away with cheating.
get back at
To take revenge on.
get cracking
To begin to work; get started.
get even
To obtain revenge.
get even with
To repay with an equivalent act, as for revenge.
get going
To make a beginning; get started.
get hold/ahold of
1. To bring into one's grasp, possession, or control.
2. To communicate with, especially by telephone.
get it Informal
To be punished or scolded.
get it on Slang
1. To become filled with energy or excitement.
2. To engage in sexual intercourse.
get nowhere
To make no progress.
get (one's) Informal
To receive one's due punishment: After sassing his parents, he really got his.
get on the stick
To begin to work.
get out of
To gain release from the obligation of: She tried to get out of taking her brother to the mall. He couldn't get out of his date on Saturday.
get (someone's) goat
To make angry or vexed.
get somewhere Informal
To make progress.
get there Informal
To make progress or achieve success.
get wind of
To learn of: got wind of the scheme.

[Middle English geten, from Old Norse geta; see ghend- in Indo-European roots.]

geta·ble, getta·ble adj.
Usage Note: The use of get in the passive, as in We got sunburned at the beach, is generally avoided in formal writing. In less formal contexts, however, the construction can provide a useful difference in tone or emphasis, as between the sentences The demonstrators were arrested and The demonstrators got arrested. The first example implies that the responsibility for the arrests rests primarily with the police, while the example using get implies that the demonstrators deliberately provoked the arrests. · In colloquial use and in numerous nonstandard varieties of American English, the past tense form got has the meaning of the present. This arose probably by dropping the helping verb have from the past perfects have got, has got: We've got to go, we've got a lot of problems became We got to go, we got a lot of problems. The reanalysis of got as a present-tense form has led to the creation of a third singular gots in some varieties of English, especially African American Vernacular English.

get out
vb (adverb)
1. to leave or escape or cause to leave or escape: used in the imperative when dismissing a person
2. to make or become known; publish or be published
3. (tr) to express with difficulty
4. (tr; often foll by of) to extract (information or money) (from a person) to get a confession out of a criminal
5. (tr) to gain or receive something, esp something of significance or value you get out of life what you put into it
6. (foll by of) to avoid or cause to avoid she always gets out of swimming
7. (tr) to solve (a puzzle or problem) successfully
8. (Team Sports / Cricket) Cricket to dismiss or be dismissed
n get-out
1. an escape, as from a difficult situation
2. (Performing Arts / Theatre) Theatre the process of moving out of a theatre the scenery, props, and costumes after a production
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Verb1.get out - move out of or depart from; "leave the room"; "the fugitive has left the country"
move - move so as to change position, perform a nontranslational motion; "He moved his hand slightly to the right"
depart, go away, go - move away from a place into another direction; "Go away before I start to cry"; "The train departs at noon"
pop out - exit briefly; "He popped out for a quick coffee break"
file out - march out, in a file
hop out, get off - get out of quickly; "The officer hopped out when he spotted an illegally parked car"
fall out - leave (a barracks) in order to take a place in a military formation, or leave a military formation; "the soldiers fell out"
go forth, leave, go away - go away from a place; "At what time does your train leave?"; "She didn't leave until midnight"; "The ship leaves at midnight"
get off - leave a vehicle, aircraft, etc.
step out - go outside a room or building for a short period of time
eject - leave an aircraft rapidly, using an ejection seat or capsule
undock - move out of a dock; "We docked at noon"
log off, log out - exit a computer; "Please log off before you go home"
2.get out - take out of a container or enclosed space; "Get out your best dress--we are going to a party!"
winkle out, winkle - remove or displace from a position
unpack, take out - remove from its packing; "unpack the presents"
3.get out - move out or away; "The troops pulled out after the cease-fire"
go forth, leave, go away - go away from a place; "At what time does your train leave?"; "She didn't leave until midnight"; "The ship leaves at midnight"
bow out, chicken out, back down, back off, pull out - remove oneself from an obligation; "He bowed out when he heard how much work was involved"
4.get out - express with difficulty; "I managed to get out a few words"
say, state, tell - express in words; "He said that he wanted to marry her"; "tell me what is bothering you"; "state your opinion"; "state your name"
5.get out - bring, take, or pull out of a container or from under a cover; "draw a weapon"; "pull out a gun"; "The mugger pulled a knife on his victim"
remove, take away, withdraw, take - remove something concrete, as by lifting, pushing, or taking off, or remove something abstract; "remove a threat"; "remove a wrapper"; "Remove the dirty dishes from the table"; "take the gun from your pocket"; "This machine withdraws heat from the environment"
pull - take away; "pull the old soup cans from the supermarket shelf"
extract, pull out, pull up, draw out, take out, pull - remove, usually with some force or effort; also used in an abstract sense; "pull weeds"; "extract a bad tooth"; "take out a splinter"; "extract information from the telegram"
unsheathe - draw from a sheath or scabbard; "the knight unsheathed his sword"
draw, take out - take liquid out of a container or well; "She drew water from the barrel"
6.get out - be released or become known; of news; "News of her death broke in the morning"
disclose, let on, divulge, expose, give away, let out, reveal, unwrap, discover, bring out, break - make known to the public information that was previously known only to a few people or that was meant to be kept a secret; "The auction house would not disclose the price at which the van Gogh had sold"; "The actress won't reveal how old she is"; "bring out the truth"; "he broke the news to her"; "unwrap the evidence in the murder case"
leak out, leak - be leaked; "The news leaked out despite his secrecy"
7.get out - escape potentially unpleasant consequences; get away with a forbidden action; "She gets away with murder!"; "I couldn't get out from under these responsibilities"
evade - use cunning or deceit to escape or avoid; "The con man always evades"
avoid - stay clear from; keep away from; keep out of the way of someone or something; "Her former friends now avoid her"
Translations
get out يَخرُج uniknout forlade herauskommen βγαίνω salir lähteä sortir izvaditi uscire 逃げる 떠나다 uitlekken stikke (av) wyjść sair выходить ta sig ur ออกไป çıkmak đi ra 出去


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I'd rot on the beach first before I'd take a tub that couldn't get out of its own way.
The faint figure behind seemed to shake the pattern, just as if she wanted to get out.
I went a trifle further than that myself; I actually rose up, as it were, and tried to get out of it.
 
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