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shut
4 dictionary results for: shut out
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) - Cite This Source - Share This
shut       [shuht] Pronunciation Key verb, shut, shut·ting, adjective, noun
–verb (used with object)
1.to put (a door, cover, etc.) in position to close or obstruct.
2.to close the doors of (often fol. by up): to shut up a shop for the night.
3.to close (something) by bringing together or folding its parts: Shut your book. Shut the window!
4.to confine; enclose: to shut a bird into a cage.
5.to bar; exclude: They shut him from their circle.
6.to cause (a business, factory, store, etc.) to end or suspend operations: He shut his store, sold his house, and moved away. We're shutting the office for two weeks in June.
7.to bolt; bar.
–verb (used without object)
8.to become shut or closed; close.
–adjective
9.closed; fastened up: a shut door.
10.Phonetics. checked.
–noun
11.the act or time of shutting or closing.
12.the line where two pieces of welded metal are united.
13.shut down,
a.to settle over so as to envelop or darken: The fog shut down rapidly.
b.to close, esp. temporarily, as a factory; cease manufacturing or business operations.
c.Also, shut down on or upon. Informal. to hinder; check; stop.
14.shut in,
a.to enclose.
b.to confine, as from illness: She broke her leg in a fall and has been shut in for several weeks.
15.shut of, Informal. free of; rid of: He wished he were shut of all his debts.
16.shut off,
a.to stop the passage of (water, traffic, electricity, etc.); close off.
b.to isolate; separate: an outpost almost completely shut off from civilization.
17.shut out,
a.to keep from entering; exclude.
b.to hide from view.
c.to prevent (an opponent or opposing team) from scoring, as in a game of baseball.
18.shut up,
a.to imprison; confine.
b.to close entirely.
c.to stop talking; become silent: I thought the neighbors would never shut up and let me sleep.
d.to stop (someone) from talking; silence.

[Origin: bef. 1000; ME schutten, OE scyttan to bolt (a door); akin to shoot]

1. See close. 4. jail, imprison, cage. 5. prohibit.
1. open.
American Heritage Dictionary - Cite This Source - Share This
shut       (shŭt)  Pronunciation Key 
v.   shut, shut·ting, shuts

v.   tr.
  1. To move (a door or lid, for example) so as to block passage through an opening.
  2. To block entrance to or exit from; close: shut a corridor.
  3. To fasten with a lock, catch, or latch.
  4. To confine in or as if in a closed space: shut them in a cage.
  5. To exclude from or as if from a closed space: shut the cats out of the house.
  6. To cause to stop operating: shut down a restaurant; a school that was shut for the vacation.

v.   intr.
  1. To move or become moved so as to block passage; close: a door that shuts by itself.
  2. To stop operating, especially automatically: The electricity shuts off at midnight.

n.  
  1. The act or time of shutting.
  2. The line of connection between welded pieces of metal.
  3. To stop the flow or passage of; cut off: shut off the hot water by closing a valve.
  4. To close off; isolate: loners who shut themselves off from the community.
  5. To cause (someone) to stop speaking; silence.
  6. To stop speaking.

Phrasal Verb(s):
shut off
  1. To stop the flow or passage of; cut off: shut off the hot water by closing a valve.
  2. To close off; isolate: loners who shut themselves off from the community.
shut out Sports
To prevent (an opponent) from scoring any runs or points.
shut up
  1. To cause (someone) to stop speaking; silence.
  2. To stop speaking.

Idiom(s):
shut (one's) eyes to
To refuse to consider or acknowledge: administrators who shut their eyes to pervasive corruption.

[Middle English shutten, from Old English scyttan; see skeud- in Indo-European roots.]

WordNet - Cite This Source - Share This
shut out

verb
prevent from entering; shut out; "The trees were shutting out all sunlight"; "This policy excludes people who have a criminal record from entering the country" [syn: exclude] [ant: admit

American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms - Cite This Source - Share This

shut out

  1. Exclude, deny entry to, block, as in Anyone convicted of a crime is shut out from the legal profession, or These curtains shut out all the light. [Late 1300s]

  2. Prevent an opponent from scoring, as in They were shut out of the last two games, or Reagan shut out Ford in the Texas primary in 1976. Originating in baseball about 1880, this usage was later transferred to other sports and then even broader usage.


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