释义 |
out of the woods
wood 1 W0232200 (wo͝od)n.1. a. The secondary xylem of trees and shrubs, lying beneath the bark and consisting largely of cellulose and lignin.b. This tissue when cut and dried, used especially for building material and fuel.2. often woodsa. A growth of trees and other plants usually covering a smaller area than a forest.b. A forest.3. An object made of wood, especially:a. Music A woodwind.b. Sports Any of a series of golf clubs used to hit long shots, having a bulbous head made of wood, metal, or graphite, and numbered one to five in order of increasing loft.v. wood·ed, wood·ing, woods v.tr.1. To fuel with wood.2. To cover with trees; forest.v.intr. To gather or be supplied with wood.adj.1. Made or consisting of wood; wooden.2. Used or suitable for cutting, storing, or working with wood.3. woods Living, growing, or present in forests: woods animals; a woods path.Idiom: out of the woods Informal Free of a difficult or hazardous situation; in a position of safety or security. [Middle English wode, from Old English wudu.]
wood 2 W0232200 (wo͝od)adj. Archaic Mentally deranged. [Middle English, from Old English wōd; see wet- in Indo-European roots.]Translationsout of the woods
out of the wood(s)No longer in danger or dealing with a particular difficulty, though not entirely resolved. Usually used in the negative. Her surgery went as well as we could have hoped, but she's not out of the woods yet. If our sales stay strong, we should be out of the woods by the next quarter.See also: of, outout of the woodsFig. past a critical phase; out of the unknown. When thepatient got out of the woods, everyone relaxed. I can give you a better prediction for your future health when you are out of the woods.See also: of, out, woodout of the woodsOut of difficulties, danger or trouble, as in We're through the worst of the recession-we're out of the woods now, or That pneumonia was serious, but Charles is finally out of the woods. This expression, alluding to having been lost in a forest, dates from Roman times; it was first recorded in English in 1792. The British usage is out of the wood. See also: of, out, woodout of the woods mod. freed from a previous state of uncertainty or danger; no longer critical. As soon as her temperature is down, she’ll be out of the woods. See also: of, out, wood out of the woods Informal Free of a difficult or hazardous situation; in a position of safety or security.See also: of, out, woodout of the woodsOut of trouble or danger. The image of emerging from a dangerous forest goes back at least to Roman times. The playwright Plautus used it (in Menaechmi, ca. 200 b.c.), as did other Roman writers. In Great Britain it is usually put as out of the wood.See also: of, out, woodEncyclopediaSeeWoodThesaurusSeewood |