gross (gross-out)
81Out of Sight — For other uses see Out of Sight (disambiguation). Out of Sight Theatrical release poster Directed by Steven Soderbergh …
82Gross receipts — Receipt Re*ceipt (r[ e]*s[=e]t ), n. [OE. receite, OF. recete, recepte, F. recette, fr. L. recipere, receptum, to receive. See {Receive}.] 1. The act of receiving; reception. At the receipt of your letter. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. Reception, as an …
83gross — [14] Gross comes via Old French gros from late Latin grossus ‘large, bulky’, a word of unknown origin (not related to German gross ‘large’). Its association with literal physical size has now largely died out in English, in the face of a growing… …
84gross income — The whole or entire profit arising from a business or pursuit. Braun s Appeal, 105 Pa 414, 415. For income tax purposes: the total income of the taxpayer; the income from all sources without deductions or allowance for exemptions; the total of… …
85gross — [14] Gross comes via Old French gros from late Latin grossus ‘large, bulky’, a word of unknown origin (not related to German gross ‘large’). Its association with literal physical size has now largely died out in English, in the face of a growing… …
86out-of-the-way — adj 1. distant, remote, secluded, outlying. See outlying. 2. unusual, uncommon, exceptional, extraordinary, singular, strange, curious, odd; eccentric, irregular, erratic, capricious, flighty, Inf. odd ball, idiosyncratic, unconventional,… …
87out-and-out — Synonyms and related words: absolute, admitting no exception, all embracing, all encompassing, all out, all pervading, arrant, born, broad based, categorical, classical, clean, clear, complete, comprehensive, conclusive, congenital, consummate,… …
88gross — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. bulky, large, fat, obese; coarse, crass; brutish, callous, unrefined, insensitive; vulgar, crude, obscene; total, whole; flagrant. See vulgarity, size, impurity, inelegance. II (Roget s IV) modif. 1 …
89gross — adj disgusting, distasteful. An Americanism of the mid 1960s, particularly popular among teenage girls. It is a fashionable usage of the standard term (from Latin grossus, meaning thick, via French and Middle English) in its sense of exces sive,… …
90gross flight path — The gross profile in a climb out segment …