take out food
1Take away food — take out food …
2take away food — Australian Slang take out food …
3Take-out — Upper left: A Meat Feast Parmo from Four Seasons in Stockton on Tees, UK. Upper right: Fish and chips. Lower left: Pizza delivery. Lower right: Döner kebab Take away redirects here. For the film of the same name, see Take Away. Take out redirects …
4take·out — /ˈteıkˌaʊt/ noun, pl outs US 1 [noncount] : food that is cooked in a restaurant and taken by a customer to be eaten in another place We ordered some Chinese takeout. called also (chiefly US) carryout (Brit) takeaway …
5take-out — take|out «TAYK OWT», noun. 1. that which is taken out or removed: »The city promised the takeout from the take home pay will decline to normal (New York Times). 2. a magazine article printed on full and successive pages and easily removable as a… …
6take|out — «TAYK OWT», noun. 1. that which is taken out or removed: »The city promised the takeout from the take home pay will decline to normal (New York Times). 2. a magazine article printed on full and successive pages and easily removable as a unit:… …
7take out — verb 1. cause to leave (Freq. 7) The teacher took the children out of the classroom • Syn: ↑move out, ↑remove • Hyponyms: ↑clear, ↑call in, ↑estrange …
8take out — I Australian Slang 1. destroy, eliminate, render harmless: take out a military post ; 2. win; 3. take away food: We had take out last night II U.S.A.; Pittsburgh, PA bringing humor to someone. That girl takes me out with that wild hairdo. III… …
9Take out — 1. destroy, eliminate, render harmless: take out a military post ; 2. win; 3. take away food: We had take out last night …
10take out — v. remove; acquire; open in a hurry; escort on a date; take away, buy food at an eating establishment to be eaten in a different location; (Slang) destroy, kill n. take away food, food bought an eating establishment to be eaten in a different… …