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Synonyms for spin out
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : spin-out |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈspɪnˌaʊt |
Top 10 synonyms for spin out Other synonyms for the word spin out
- add to
- aggrandize
- amplify
- attract
- beef up
- branch out
- bridge
- burst forth
- carry on
- continue
- cool
- crane
- defer
- dilate
- distend
- drag
- drag on
- drag one's feet
- drag out
- draw
- draw out
- endure
- extend
- fan out
- fill
- go
- go on
- go on slowly
- grow
- heighten
- hold
- hold off
- hold up
- increase
- inflate
- keep going
- last
- lead on
- lengthen
- let it ride
- let out
- lie out
- magnify
- make
- make longer
- make taut
- make tense
- mantle
- multiply
- open
- overlap
- pad
- perpetuate
- persist
- postpone
- proceed
- procrastinate
- prolong
- prolongate
- protract
- pull
- pull out
- put off
- put on hold
- put rubber in
- pyramid
- rack
- range
- reach
- recline
- repose
- run
- run on
- shoot up
- span
- spin
- spin out
- spread
- spread out
- spring up
- stall
- strain
- stretch
- stretch out
- string out
- supplement
- swell
- take
- tauten
- tighten
- tug
- unfold
- unfurl
- unroll
- widen
Définition of spin out
Origin :- Old English spinnan "draw out and twist fibers into thread," from Proto-Germanic *spenwanan (cf. Old Norse and Old Frisian spinna, Danish spinde, Dutch spinnen, Old High German spinnan, German spinnen, Gothic spinnan), from PIE *(s)pen- "stretch" (cf. Armenian henum "I weave;" Greek patos "garment, literally "that which is spun;" Lithuanian pinu "I plait, braid," spandau "I spin;" Middle Welsh cy-ffiniden "spider;" see span (v.)).
- Sense of "to cause to turn rapidly" is from 1610s; meaning "revolve, turn around rapidly" first recorded 1660s. Meaning "attempt to influence reporters' minds after an event has taken place but before they have written about it" seems to have risen to popularity in the 1984 U.S. presidential campaign; e.g. spin doctor, first attested 1984. Spinning wheel is attested from c.1400; spinning-jenny is from 1783 (see jenny); invented by James Hargreaves c.1764-7, patented 1770.
- As in lengthen : verb extend
- As in prolong : verb extend, draw out
- As in protract : verb extend, draw out
- As in stretch : verb extend, elongate
- As in drag out : verb extend
- As in prolongate : verb lengthen
- As in drag on/drag out : verb extend time of action
- As in draw out : verb prolong
- As in elongate : verb make longer
- As in extend : verb make larger, longer
- The truth was just too complicated to spin out; he had no real intent to deceive.
- Extract from : « Pagan Passions » by Gordon Randall Garrett
- What a proper place for a philosopher to spin out the remnant of his days!
- Extract from : « The Eve of the Revolution » by Carl Becker
- It is not necessary, therefore, to spin out this introduction.
- Extract from : « The Memoirs of Count Carlo Gozzi; Volume the first » by Count Carlo Gozzi
- But the future poets will not spin out their ideas in metre at great length.
- Extract from : « The Literature of Ecstasy » by Albert Mordell
- Then the brown web of the seine began to spin out over the stern.
- Extract from : « Poor Man's Rock » by Bertrand W. Sinclair
- For dreams need not time to spin out their intolerable length.
- Extract from : « A Cigarette-Maker's Romance » by F. Marion Crawford
- The answer was, that she had really been trying to spin out three pages.
- Extract from : « How To Do It » by Edward Everett Hale
- You might care to take a spin out into the surrounding country.
- Extract from : « The Valley of the Giants » by Peter B. Kyne
- He was gauging the distance to the hangar door, the positions of the guards, the time it would take to spin out the combination.
- Extract from : « A World is Born » by Leigh Douglass Brackett
- It seems he was returning from a spin out on the Barnes road and accidentally ran his machine against you.
- Extract from : « An Oregon Girl » by Alfred Ernest Rice
Antonyms for spin out
- abbreviate
- abridge
- accelerate
- advance
- block
- cease
- clip
- close
- complete
- compress
- conceal
- concentrate
- condense
- constrict
- contract
- curtail
- cut
- decrease
- deflate
- degrade
- diminish
- discontinue
- do
- end
- exclude
- expedite
- finish
- forward
- further
- halt
- hasten
- hide
- hinder
- hold
- hurry
- keep
- lessen
- lose
- lower
- maintain
- narrow
- push
- quicken
- reduce
- repel
- repulse
- restrict
- shorten
- shrink
- speed up
- stop
- take back
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019