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A Writer's Dictionary:

buy someone out Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with B » butterpat ... by right » buy someone out


buy
verb buys, bought, buying
    tr & intr
    1. To obtain something by paying a sum of money for it. Opposite of sell.
      Thesaurus: purchase, procure, acquire, get, obtain; Antonym: sell.
    2. To be a means of obtaining something.
      Example: There are some things money can't buy
      Thesaurus: bribe, corrupt, influence, fix (slang).
    3. To obtain something by giving up or sacrificing something else.
      Example: success bought at the expense of happiness
    4. colloq
      To believe or accept as true.
      Example: I don't buy his story
    5. To bribe them.
      Example: He can't be bought, he's thoroughly honest
      Form: buy someone off (sometimes)
noun
    1. A thing bought.
      Thesaurus: purchase, bargain, steal (slang).
      Form: a good buy (usually in)
      Form: a bad buy
Idiom: buy time
    colloq
    To gain more time before a decision or action, etc is taken.
Idiom: have bought it
    slang
    To have been killed.
Etymology: Anglo-Saxon bycgan.

Phrasal Verb: buy something in
    To buy a stock or supply of it.At an auction: to buy it back for the owner when the reserve price is not reached.
Phrasal Verb: buy into something
    To buy shares or an interest in (a company, etc).
Phrasal Verb: buy someone off
    To get rid of (a threatening person, etc) by paying them money.
Phrasal Verb: buy oneself out
    To pay to be released from the armed forces.
Phrasal Verb: buy someone out
    To pay to take over possession of something from them, especially to buy all the shares that they hold in a company. See also buy-out.
Phrasal Verb: buy something up
    To buy the whole stock of it.


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