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A Writer's Dictionary:

off the beaten track Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with O » off colour ... officiator » off the beaten track


beat
verb beat (past tense), beaten (past participle), beat, beating (present participle)
    now rare:
    1. To hit (a person, animal, etc) violently and repeatedly, especially to harm or punish them.
      Thesaurus: batter, hammer, whip, flog, whale (US slang), drub, trounce, (slang) lay into, lick, work over; smite, lash, lambaste, cane.
    2. To strike something repeatedly, eg to remove dust or make a sound.
    intr
    3. To knock or strike repeatedly.
      Example: rain beating against the window
      Form: beat against something (usually)
      Form: beat at something
      Form: beat on something
    4. To defeat; to do something better, sooner or quicker than someone else.
      Example: always beats me at chess
      Thesaurus: defeat, overcome, conquer, best, vanquish, surpass, worst; Antonym: succumb to, lose to.
    5. To be too difficult to be solved or understood by someone. See also it beats me below.
      Example: The last puzzle had me beaten
    6. To mix or stir thoroughly.
      Example: Beat two eggs in a bowl
      Form: beat something up (sometimes)
    7a. To make or shape it by repeatedly striking the raw material;
      Example: beating out horseshoes on the forge
      Form: beat something out (also)
    7b. To flatten or reduce the thickness of it by beating.
      Form: beat something out (also)
    intr
    8. To move in a regular pattern of strokes, etc.
      Example: heard my heart beating
      Thesaurus: pulsate, throb, flutter, palpitate, tremble, quiver, heave, oscillate, quaver, writhe, thrill.
    tr & intr
    9. To move rhythmically up and down.
      Example: tent-flaps beating in the wind
    10. To mark or show (musical time or rhythm) with the hand or a baton, etc.
      Form: beat time (usually)
      Form: beat out time
    11. To push, drive or force them or it away.
      Form: beat someone or something back (especially)
      Form: beat someone or something down off
    tr & intr
    12. To strike (bushes or trees, etc) to force birds or animals into the open for shooting.
      Form: beat up something (also)
noun
    1. A regular recurrent stroke, or its sound.
      Example: the beat of my heart
      Thesaurus: cadence, pulsation, throbbing, pounding, palpitation, flutter, oscillation, undulation.
    2a. In music and poetry, etc: the basic pulse, unit of rhythm or accent
      Example: two beats to the bar
      Thesaurus: stress, accent, division, measure, rhythm, metre, time.
    2b. The conductor's stroke of the hand or baton indicating such a pulse
      Example: Watch the beat
    2c. In popular music: rhythm; a strong rhythmic pulse.
    3. A regular or usual course or journey.
      Example: a policeman on his beat
    4a. In the 1950s and 60s: a member or follower of the beat generation;
    4b. A beatnik
adj
    (especially US)
    1. colloq
      Worn out; exhausted.
Derivative: beatable
adj
    Derivative: beater
    noun
      A person or thing that beats in any sense, eg a person who rouses or beats up game for shooting, an electric or hand-operated device for beating, etc. Also in compounds.
        Example: egg-beater
    Idiom: beat about the bush
      To talk tediously about a subject without coming to the main point.
        Thesaurus: waffle, ramble, tergiversate.
    Idiom: beat a hasty retreat (beat a retreat)
      To go away in a hurry, especially in order to escape or avoid an unpleasant or difficult situation. Compare beat the retreat below.
    Idiom: beat it
      slang
      To go away immediately and quickly.
    Idiom: beat one's brains (beat one's brains out)
      colloq
      To puzzle long and hard over something.
    Idiom: beat one's breast
      To show unrestrained, wild or exaggerated signs of grief.
        Thesaurus: repent, apologize, be penitent, be sorry, be remorseful.
    Idiom: beat someone's brains out
      colloq
      To kill or seriously injure them by hitting them about the head.
    Idiom: beat someone to it
      To manage to do something before they can.
        Example: I went back to tidy up, but someone had beaten me to it
    Idiom: beat the bounds
      (rit)
      To perform a traditional ceremony of tracing out the parish boundaries by walking around them, formally striking the boundary stones, etc with willow twigs. See also common-riding.
    Idiom: beat the clock
      To do or finish something within the time allowed.
    Idiom: beat the pants off someone (beat the socks off someone)
      colloq
      To defeat them thoroughly.
    Idiom: beat the rap
      (riginally US)
      slang
      To escape without punishment.
    Idiom: beat the retreat
      To perform the military ceremony (beating the retreat) consisting of marching and military music, usually performed at dusk, originally marking the recall (by drum beat) of troops to their quarters.
    Idiom: Can you beat it? (Can you beat that?)
      colloq
      As an expression of astonishment: Would you believe it, or that, to be possible, true, etc?
    Idiom: dead beat
      colloq
      Very tired; exhausted.
    Idiom: it beats me
      colloq
      It is beyond my comprehension; I cannot understand it or work it out.
    Idiom: off the beaten track
      Away from main roads and towns; isolated.
    Idiom: you can't beat something
      colloq
      There is no substitute for it, or nothing better than it.
    Etymology: Anglo-Saxon beatan.

    Phrasal Verb: beat down
      Said of the sun: to give out great heat.Said of rain: to fall heavily.
    Phrasal Verb: beat someone down
      To force them to reduce the price of something by bargaining.
    Phrasal Verb: beat something down
      To strike it heavily until it collapses.
        Example: beat the door down
    Phrasal Verb: beat someone off
      To check or put a stop to them, or succeed in overcoming them.
        Example: Police beat off the protesters
    Phrasal Verb: beat someone up
      To punch, kick or hit them severely and repeatedly.
    Phrasal Verb: beat up on someone
      Beat someone up




    track
    noun
      1a. A mark or series of marks that something leaves behind;
        Example: a tyre track
        Thesaurus: trail, footprint, impression, trace, mark, remnant, clue.
      1b. A mark or series of marks, or a trail, that usually consists of footprints, and which indicates that a person, animal, etc has passed by;
      1c. A course of action, thought, etc that someone or something has taken.
        Example: followed in her mother's tracks and studied medicine
      2. A rough path, especially one that has been made by many people walking along it.
        Thesaurus: course, path, road, route, passage, lane, walk.
      3. A specially prepared course, especially one that is used for racing.
        Example: a race track
      4. The branch of athletics that comprises all the running events. See also track and field.
      5. A railway line, ie the parallel rails, the space in between, and the sleepers and stones below.
      6. A length of railing that something, such as a curtain, spotlight, etc, can move along.
      7a. The groove cut in a record (noun 4) by the recording instrument;
      7b. An individual song, etc on an album, CD, cassette, etc;
      7c. One of several paths on magnetic recording tape that receives information from a single input channel;
      7d. One of a series of parallel paths on magnetic recording tape that contains a single sequence of signals;
      7e. A soundtrack;
      7f. computing.
        An area on the surface of a magnetic disk where data can be stored and which is created during the process of formatting.
      8. A line, path or course of travel, passage or movement.
        Example: followed the track of the storm
      9. The line or course of thought, reasoning, etc.
        Example: couldn't follow the track of his argument
      10. The predetermined line of travel of an aircraft.
      11. The continuous band that heavy vehicles, eg tanks, mechanical diggers, etc, have instead of individual tyres and which allows them to travel over rough surfaces.
      12. The distance between a wheel on one side of a vehicle and the corresponding wheel on the other side, taken by measuring the distance between the parts of the wheels which actually touch the ground.
      13. drug-taking slang
        A red mark, eg on someone's forearm, that indicates that they use or have used intravenous drugs.
        Form: tracks (usually)
    verb tracked, tracking
      1. To follow the marks, footprints, etc left by (a person or animal).
        Thesaurus: follow, hunt, trail, pursue, stalk, dog (slang).
      2. To follow and usually plot the course of (a spacecraft, satellite, etc) by radar.
      intr
      3. Said of a television or film camera or its operator: to move, especially in such a way as to follow a moving subject, always keeping them or it in focus. See also tracking shot.
        Form: track in (often)
        Form: track out
        Form: track back
      4. Said of a stylus or laser beam: to extract information from (a recording medium, eg a vinyl record or a compact disc).
      intr
      5. Said of a vehicle's rear wheels: to run exactly in the course of the front wheels.
    Idiom: across the tracks
      colloq
      A socially disadvantaged area of town.
    Idiom: cover one's tracks
      To make an effort to ensure that one's motives, movements, etc cannot be easily discovered.
    Idiom: in one's tracks
      Exactly where one is standing; right there and then.
        Example: The news stopped her in her tracks
    Idiom: keep track of something or someone (lose track of something or someone)
      To keep, or fail to keep, oneself informed about the progress, whereabouts, etc of them or it.
        Example: Sorry I'm late ― I lost all track of time
    Idiom: make tracks
      colloq
      To leave; to set out.
        Thesaurus: leave, depart, set out, dash off, hurry, make off, hit the road, scram (slang), split (slang).
    Idiom: off the beaten track
      Away from busy roads and therefore difficult to gain access to or find.
    Idiom: on the right track (on the wrong track)
      Pursuing the right or wrong line of inquiry.
    Idiom: on the track of someone or something
      Following, pursuing or looking for them or it.
    Idiom: the wrong side of the tracks
      A poor or disadvantaged urban area, especially one that is perceived as socially inferior.
    Etymology: 15c: from French trac.

    Phrasal Verb: track someone or something down
      To search for and find them or it after following clues, etc.
        Example: managed to track down the address


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