The AI-powered English dictionary
not comparable
(Canada, US) (Of food) intended to be eaten off the premises from which it was bought. examples
countable and uncountable, plural takeouts
(Canada, US, Philippines) Food purchased from a takeaway. examples
(curling) A stone that hits another stone, removing it from play. examples
(bridge) A double of an opponent's bid, intended to invite one's partner to compete in the auction, rather than to penalise one's opponents. examples
(television) A detailed news segment. quotations examples
Takeouts on important running topics in the news are one way to add a valuable dimension to the evening news. One consequence, however, has been that there are fewer minutes available on the broadcast for hard news out of Washington.
1994, Penn Kimball, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Downsizing the news: network cutbacks in the nation's capital (page 19)