bang out
English
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Verb
bang out (third-person singular simple present bangs out, present participle banging out, simple past and past participle banged out)
- (transitive, idiomatic) To do something quickly, in a slipshod, or unprofessional manner.
- I've got this paper due tomorrow, but I think I can bang it out in one night.
- The band were banging out a vaguely recognisable version of the Star Spangled Banner.
- (intransitive, aviation, slang) To eject.
- 2010, Tony Doyle, Flying at the Edge, →ISBN, page 253:
- The pilot promptly banged out and the aircraft flew almost as far as the airfield, eventually crashing into a farmer's field.
- (transitive, British, printing) To celebrate (a fellow printing or newspaper industry worker) to mark their completion of an apprenticeship or their retirement by (formerly) hitting metal furniture in the printing room or (more recently) hitting one's desk in the newsroom.
- 2008 June 26, “Hill and Dryden off with a bang”, in The Guardian:
- As Hill left, his colleagues on the foreign desk started to bang him out – the traditional printers' farewell that involves thumping the desk as loudly as possible. According to reports the whole of the Telegraph's vast multimedia newsroom, said to be the largest in Europe, was shaking as staff banged out yet another colleague.
Usage notes
- (to do something quickly): The object may appear before or after the particle. If the object is a pronoun, then it must be before the particle.
Translations
Noun
- (slang) Someone who works or studies seemingly way too much.
- Jamie finished the paper and did all the homework. He's such a bang out.
Further reading
- banging out on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Etymology 2
Clipping of bang out of order
Anagrams
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