write out
English
Verb
write out (third-person singular simple present writes out, present participle writing out, simple past wrote out, past participle written out)
- (transitive) To write at full length or in expanded form.
- Don't use abbreviations; write out words!
- (transitive) To write or fill out (a ticket or citation).
- (transitive, by extension):
- To exclude from a narrative or history.
- 2018 April 11, Zoe Williams, “What's the best way to get written out of history? Be a middle-aged woman”, in The Guardian:
- The temperance movement was driven by women, but we let ourselves be written out of that because it gave us a bad name.
- 2019 May 14, Karen Zraick, Chang W. Lee, “Chinese Railroad Workers Were Almost Written Out of History. Now They’re Getting Their Due.”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- Chinese Railroad Workers Were Almost Written Out of History.
- (chiefly television or radio) To remove (a character in a fictional series such as a TV show) by writing the script so as to explain their disappearance (through death, moving away, etc.).
- 2019 February 20, Sopan Deb, “Fox Stands by Jussie Smollett: ‘He Is Not Being Written Out of the Show’”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- “Jussie Smollett continues to be a consummate professional on set and as we have previously stated, he is not being written out of the show,” 20th Century Fox Television and Fox Entertainment said in a joint statement released on Wednesday.
- To exclude from a narrative or history.
- (intransitive) To exhaust one's mental capacity by too much writing.
Translations
to write at full length
|
to remove (a character from a fictional series)