Synonyms for out a limb
Grammar : Adj, adv, noun |
Spell : lim |
Phonetic Transcription : lɪm |
Top 10 synonyms for out a limb Other synonyms for the word out a limb
- accident
- adventuresome
- ambiguous
- aroused
- assailable
- attackable
- be taken in
- borderline
- brassy
- brave
- caught
- chance
- chancy
- cheeky
- cocky
- contingent
- crusty
- disposed
- double-trouble
- dubious
- dynamite
- easily moved
- endangered
- endangerment
- equivocal
- exposed
- exposure
- fall for
- fearless
- fire eating
- foolhardy
- forward
- fraught with danger
- game
- given
- go for broke
- going for broke
- gritty
- gullible
- gutsy
- gutty
- hairy
- hanging by a thread
- hazard
- hazardous
- helpless
- hot shot
- iffy
- impressed
- impressible
- impressionable
- impudent
- impugnable
- impulsive
- in a pickle
- in a tight spot
- in Dutch
- in hot water
- in the line of fire
- inclined
- indecisive
- indefensible
- influenced
- insecure
- insecurity
- intrepid
- jeopardous
- liability
- liable
- like a sitting duck
- loaded
- long shot
- mark
- movable
- naked
- nervy
- nonresistant
- not a prayer
- obnoxious
- obtrusive
- off the deep end
- on slippery ground
- on the hot seat
- on the line
- on the spot
- on thin ice
- open
- out on a limb
- peril
- perilous
- persuadable
- playing with fire
- plucky
- powerless
- precarious
- precariousness
- predisposed
- pregnable
- problematic
- prone
- pushover
- rash
- ready
- receptive
- reckless
- responsive
- risk
- risky
- rocky
- roused
- rugged
- salty
- sensible
- sensile
- sensitive
- sentient
- shaky
- sitting duck
- slippery
- smart
- smart-alecky
- soft
- speculative
- spunky
- stirred
- subject
- sucker
- suggestible
- susceptible
- susceptive
- swallow
- swayed
- temerarious
- tender
- thin-skinned
- ticklish
- touch and go
- touch-and-go
- touched
- touchy
- treacherous
- tricky
- tumble for
- unarmed
- uncertain
- unguarded
- unhealthy
- unprotected
- unreliable
- unsafe
- unsettled
- unsound
- unstable
- unsteady
- unsure
- up a tree
- up the creek
- valiant
- venture
- venturesome
- vincible
- vulnerability
- vulnerable
- weak
- wicked
- wide open
- wide-open
Définition of out a limb
Origin :- "part or member," Old English lim "limb, joint, main branch of a tree," from Proto-Germanic *limu- (cf. Old Norse limr "limb," lim "small branch of a tree"), a variant of *liþu- (cf. Old English liþ, Old Frisian lith, Old Norse liðr, Gothic liþus "a limb;" and with prefix ga-, source of German Glied "limb, member"), from PIE root *lei- "to bend, be movable, be nimble." The parasitic -b began to appear late 1500s for no etymological reason (perhaps by influence of limb (n.2)). In Old and Middle English, and until lately in dialects, it could mean "any visible body part."
- The lymmes of generacion were shewed manyfestly. [Caxton, "The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Auyan, Alfonce, and Poge," 1484]
- Hence, limb-lifter "fornicator" (1570s). To go out on a limb in figurative sense "enter a risky situation" is from 1897. Life and limb in reference to the body inclusively is from c.1200.
- As in precarious : adj tricky, doubtful
- As in risky : adj dangerous
- As in susceptible : adj exposed, naive
- As in unprotected : adj defenseless
- As in vulnerable : adj open to attack
- As in behind the eight ball : adj in a jam
- As in pregnable : adj vulnerable
- As in vincible : adj vulnerable
- As in daring : adj adventurous
- As in out on a limb : adv in trouble
- As in jeopardy : noun danger, trouble
Antonyms for out a limb
- able
- afraid
- assurance
- assured
- bashful
- careful
- cautious
- certain
- certainty
- chicken
- closed
- cowardly
- definite
- fearful
- firm
- guarded
- happy
- harmless
- healthy
- honest
- insensitive
- meek
- plan
- protected
- protection
- reliable
- resistant
- resisting
- safe
- safety
- secure
- settled
- shy
- stable
- steady
- strong
- sure
- surety
- thoughtful
- timid
- unadventurous
- undoubted
- unlikely
- unresponsive
- unsusceptible
- unwilling
- weak
- well
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019