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check out

VERB
  1. examine so as to determine accuracy, quality, or condition
    check the brakes
    Check out the engine
  2. trace
    We are running down a few tips
  3. record, add up, and receive payment for items purchased
    She was checking out the apples that the customer had put on the conveyer belt
  4. try to learn someone's opinions and intentions
    I have to sound out the new professor
  5. be verified or confirmed; pass inspection
    These stories don't check!
  6. announce one's departure from a hotel
  7. withdraw money by writing a check

How To Use check out In A Sentence

  • Noel and Melva travel a great deal, allowing them to check out the marketplace, look at eating habits worldwide and find suitable equipment for the bakehouse.
  • I have been finding the BBC a bit vanilla of late and will check out Channel 4 news instead.
  • Also thanx for the tip … I'll have to check out that book.
  • Check out the pincushion hakea with its pointy-tipped nuts like fairy bells; the teak pods that open up like wooden flowers, and the large woody pears with slightly furry grey skin that's very soft to the touch.
  • Check out our new fashion range!
  • Check out our dope new album.
  • Old guys spend more time sitting up late after the family's asleep, and in these hours your old guy will plan and replan his upcoming expedition, put new laces on his wading shoes, tie flies, dress in all his Arctic gear in order to see what it's like to move around in, call another insomniac old guy and check out up-to-the-minute river conditions, and so on. The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan
  • Check out our selection of short pants, short sleeve T'S, camisoles, sleeveless vests, and organic cotton striped baby shirts and leggings.
  • This Kristo's horoscope site had some interesting stuff on it that I want to come back and check out, about dreams, astrology, alchemy, intuition and some other junk.
  • In the eyes of this mall's planners, a typical Mexican family consists of: a man dressed in full charro gear (hat, tight trousers, matching bolero jacket and a huge belt buckle;) a woman in a maid-style apron (check out her mandil) who is probably someone's maid, and a preppy kid in shorts and cardigan who probably goes to school in the "right side" of the border and wants nothing to do with the other two. Mi blog es tu blog
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