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Etymology of the English word out

the English word out (afară)
derived from the Latin word ut
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *ud-

Derivations in English

outback, outie, outran, outrun, stockout, outage, outen, outer, outing, outright, workout, wipeout, whiteout, watchout, washout, turnout, tryout, takeout, strikeout, stretchout, stakeout, shutout, shootout, shakeout, setout, sellout, rustout, rubout, rollout, readout, rainout, pushout, printout, pitchout, phaseout, payout, outturn, outcrop, missout, lookout, lockout, layout, holdout, hideout, hangout, handout, groundout, freezeout, flunkout, fallout, dugout, dryout, dropout, cutout, cookout, closeout, cleanout, checkout, campout, burnout, bugout, breakout, blowout, blackout, but, outlet, outward, throughout, utmost, outsource

Derivations in other languages

French out, Romanian aut

Cognates

Dutch uit, German aus, Icelandic út, Swedish ut

Usage

Word found in Modern English



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