Englishfor English speakers
fallen
—
adjective
having dropped by the force of gravity
fallen leaves covered the forest floor
sat on a fallen tree trunk
—
adjective
having fallen in or collapsed
a fallen building
—
adjective
having lost your chastity
a fallen woman
—
adjective
killed in battle
to honor fallen soldiers
out
Preposition
—
Something that is out is not in.
Polly opened the door and went out.
—
If something using electricity is out, it is turned off or the electricity is not flowing..
Turn the light out before you leave.
The power's out so nothing's working.
I'm trying to find which light went out.
Oh, no! The fire's gone out again.
—
Something that moves out moves from the inside to a place that is not inside.
He took the pen out of his pocket.
Please, close the door as you go out.
If you walk out that door, you can't come back.
The car stopped and out came two men.
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far away
We live out in the country.
He's about half an hour out of Toronto.
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If someone is out, they are not in the place where someone is looking for them.
You can't see the doctor now. He is out.
—
to a number of people
We'll give out the books after everyone has arrived.
—
away
Don't throw that out. I'm still using it.
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If something is out, you can look at or see it.
the sun is out
the flowers are out
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If something comes out of something, it comes from it.
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If something is out, it is available for sale.
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If something is out, it is not in fashion.
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If someone is out, they are not conscious.
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If a you are out of something, you had it before but you've used or sold all of it.
—
If mathx/math is made out of mathy/math, mathy/math is the material that mathx/math is made of.
out
Noun
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If someone is prevented from scoring in baseball, they make an out.
There were two men on base and two outs.
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A way to escape is an out.
with
Preposition
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With is used to show the other people or things present when something happened
I went to school with my brother.
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With is used to describe something added to something else
The cat has a collar with a bell on it.
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With is used to show what thing is used to do something
He hit the nail with a hammer.
—
Used to introduce non-finite and verbless clauses.
With the children so sick, we weren't able to get much work done.