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| a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question. |
| a gadget; dingus; thingumbob. |
| break out | |
| —vb (foll by in) | |
| 1. | (intr, adverb) to begin or arise suddenly: panic broke out |
| 2. | (intr, adverb) to make an escape, esp from prison or confinement |
| 3. | (of the skin) to erupt (in a rash, pimples, etc) |
| 4. | (tr, adverb) to launch or introduce (a new product) |
| 5. | (tr, adverb) to open and start using: break out the champagne |
| —n | |
| 6. | an escape, esp from prison or confinement |
| 7. | a. a great success, esp following relatively disappointing performance |
| b. (as modifier): a breakout year | |
break definition
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break out definition
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break out
Develop suddenly and forcefully. For example, A fire broke out last night, or He broke out in a sweat. [a.d. 1000]
Be affected with a skin eruption, such as a rash or boils, as in A teenager's face often breaks out in pimples. [c. 1300]
Prepare something for consumption, action, or use, as in Let's break out the champagne, or It's such a fine day
let's break out the fishing rods. [Early 1800s]
break out of. Force out by breaking; also, escape from confinement. For example, The hurricane broke the glass out of all the windows, or He broke out of prison but was soon apprehended. [Early 1600s]
Isolate a portion of a body of data, as in Please break out the sales figures from the quarterly report. [Mid-1900s]