out of

Multiple Entries:
  out    picture  

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
out/aʊt/
adverb
  • 1 moving away from a place, especially from one that is enclosed to one that is open.

    ■ outdoors.

    ■ no longer in prison.

  • 2 situated far or at a particular distance from somewhere: a farm out in the middle of nowhere.

    ■ to sea, away from the land.

    ■ (of the tide) falling or at its lowest level.

    ■ at a specified distance away from the goal or a finishing line.

  • 3 in a public place for pleasure or entertainment.
  • 4 so as to be revealed, heard, or known.
  • 5 at or to an end.

    ■ so as to be finished.

  • 6 (of a light or fire) so as to be extinguished or no longer burning.
preposition non-standard contraction of out of (sense 1). adjective
  • 1 not at home or one's place of work.
  • 2 made public; revealed.

    ■ published.

    informal in existence or use.

    ■ open about one's homosexuality.

  • 3 no longer existing.

    ■ no longer in fashion.

  • 4 not possible or worth considering.
  • 5 unconscious.
  • 6 mistaken: he was slightly out in his calculations.
  • 7 (of the ball in tennis, squash, etc.) outside the playing area.
  • 8 Cricket & Baseball no longer batting.
  • 9 (of a flower) open.
noun
  • 1 informal a way of escaping from a difficult situation.
  • 2 Baseball an act of putting a player out.
verb
  • 1 informal reveal the homosexuality of.
  • 2 knock out.
  • 3 dated expel or dismiss.
– phrases
at outs (N. Amer. on the outs) in dispute.
out and about engaging in normal activity after an illness.
out for intent on having.
out of
  • 1 from (a place or source).
  • 2 not having (something).
out of it informal
  • 1 not included.
  • 2 unaware of what is happening.

    Brit. drunk.

out to do something keenly striving to do something.
out with it say what you are thinking.
– origin OE ūt (adv.), ūtian (v.), of Gmc origin.
usage: The use of out rather than out of as a preposition, as in he threw it out the window, is common in informal contexts, but is not widely accepted in standard British English.

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
picture/ˈpɪktʃə(r)/
noun
  • 1 a painting, drawing, or photograph.

    ■ a portrait.

    ■ an image on a television screen.

  • 2 an impression formed from an account or description: a full picture of the disaster had not yet emerged.

    ■ (often in phr. in (or out of) the picture) informal a state of being fully informed about or involved in something.

  • 3 a cinema film.

    ■ (the pictures) the cinema.

  • 4 archaic a person or thing resembling another closely.
verb
  • 1 represent in a picture.
  • 2 form a mental image of.
– phrases
be (or look) a picture
  • 1 be beautiful.
  • 2 look amusingly startled.
the big picture informal the situation as a whole.
a (or the) picture of —— the embodiment of a specified state or emotion: she looked a picture of health.
(as) pretty as a picture very pretty.
– origin ME: from L. pictura, from pict-, pingere ‘to paint’.
'out of' also found in these Oxford entries:

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