clean out
See also: cleanout
English
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Verb
editclean out (third-person singular simple present cleans out, present participle cleaning out, simple past and past participle cleaned out)
- (transitive) To clean, especially to tidy by removing the contents.
- Hyponyms: clear out, dig out, muck out, shovel out
- Clean out your purse and at least get rid of all the trash you're hauling around.
- 1959 March, R. C. Riley, “Home with the Milk”, in Trains Illustrated, page 155:
- As soon as they have been pumped dry they are thoroughly cleaned out with high pressure hoses to prepare them for the next load.
- (transitive, slang) To take all money or possessions from.
- Synonyms: clear out, take to the cleaners
- Coordinate term: wipe out
- The divorce cleaned him out.
- 1969, William Goldman, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, spoken by Macon (Donnelly Rhodes):
- Well, looks like you just about cleaned everybody out, fella. You haven't lost a hand since you lost the deal.
- (transitive, dated, slang) To hit or strike (someone); to beat up.
- 2000, Antonia Logue, Shadow-Box[1]:
- could have cleaned him out with an uppercut to the side of his head.
- To defeat, to cause to wash out.
- 2024 March 10, David Hytner, “Doku involved at both ends as Liverpool and Manchester City share spoils”, in The Guardian[2]:
- Liverpool needed a break and they got it at the beginning of the second half, from, of all things, a misplaced City pass. Aké was the culprit, undercooking his attempt to go back to Ederson and seeing Núñez steal in. He toed it away from the goalkeeper and was promptly cleaned out by him.
Derived terms
edit- cleanout (noun)
Translations
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