Definition of Eat out

1. Verb. Eat at a restaurant or at somebody else's home. "Sam and Sue eat out"

Exact synonyms: Dine Out
Generic synonyms: Eat
Antonyms: Eat In

Definition of Eat out

1. Verb. (intransitive) To dine at a restaurant or such public place. ¹

2. Verb. (transitive slang idiomatic) To perform cunnilingus. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Lexicographical Neighbors of Eat Out

eat in
eat into
eat like a bird
eat like a horse
eat like a pig
eat my dust
eat my shorts
eat on
eat one's Wheaties
eat one's hat
eat one's heart out
eat one's own dog food
eat one's seed corn
eat one's words
eat one's young
eat out of someone's hand
eat someone's dust
eat someone out of house and home
eat the seed corn
eat the wind
eat up
eatability
eatable
eatables
eatage
eatages
eatathon

Literary usage of Eat out

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Notes and Queries by Martim de Albuquerque (1858)
"Why, will any young1 Templar eat out the back of a coach? “Bayes. No, egad! But you'll grant, it is mighty natural for a mouse. ..."

2. The Growth of British Policy: An Historical Essay by John Robert Seeley (1895)
"... which made his Majesty grasp at this occasion of eating out the Dutch, the kingdom's rivals in trade, rather than to eat out his own people's bowels in ..."

3. Mores Catholici: Or, Ages of Faith by Kenelm Henry Digby (1894)
"The little animal which men call squirrel used often to leap down from the high brandies, jump on his neck, creep into his bosom, and eat out of his hand. ..."

4. The Declaration of Independence: Its History by John Hampden Hazelton (1906)
"... Swarms swarms swarms swarms Swarms of Officers of officers of Officers of officers of officers of officers of Officers a people, and eat out their ..."

5. Annual Report by Illinois Farmers' Institute (1905)
"which eat out large cavities in its side. It is similarly gnawed and irregularly eaten, when young, by sod web-worms ..."

6. A First Book in Geology: Designed for the Use of Beginners by Nathaniel Southgate Shaler (1895)
"... they climb towards the surface, eat out caves in the rocks, especially if they be limestones; in the course of time, when the waters are less hot, ..."

7. The Medical Times and Gazette (1858)
"... pouch below the bill ; and the pelican applying its lower jaw against its own breast, allows its young to eat out of this pocket as out of a plate. ..."

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