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takeout

[ UK /tˈe‍ɪka‍ʊt/ ]
[ US /ˈteɪˌkaʊt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or involving food to be taken and eaten off the premises
    the takeout counter
    `take-away' is chiefly British
    takeout pizza
NOUN
  1. (bridge) a bid that asks your partner to bid another suit
  2. prepared food that is intended to be eaten off of the premises
    in England they call takeout food `takeaway'

How To Use takeout In A Sentence

  • The takeout rate will be lowered from 19% to 16% on daily double, exacta, trifecta, superfecta, and pick three wagering.
  • I'm a city girl who loves Thai takeout, and I usually buy my wine from the corner deli.
  • When he spent the night (rare, like a Bigfoot sighting) we slept in like teenagers and ordered takeout from the Thai place around the corner. Three
  • This holiday season, intersperse these kinds of meals and the inevitable "what's for dinner?" won't send you down the fast food or takeout path. Monica Strawbridge: Meals for the Holiday Rush
  • The police are on a stakeout in our neighborhood.
  • Similar to an airplane meal in presentation, the food is served in various compartments of a square container that can be used for everything from a takeout lunch to a well-balanced supper.
  • I takeout and fell asleep in front of the television.
  • And many Puebloans regularly stop in for takeout sub sandwiches, meatballs or sausage and pasta specialties such as manicotti or ravioli. News/local from chieftain.com
  • 3 (1) This airborne stakeout was directed at one Jose Padilla, otherwise known as Abdullah al-Muhajir, a Brooklyn-born street thug now identified by investigators as a would-be Qaeda terrorist.
  • Cardenas awoke to a crawling sensation the likes of which he had experienced only once before, twenty years earlier while engaged in a stakeout in a rattrap of a motel in the worst part of Tucson. The Mocking Program
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