wyjście
Meaning
- verbal noun of wyjść; exiting
- exit, way out
- (card games, dominoes) lead
- output
Frequency
Hyphenated as
wyj‧ście
Gender
Neuter
Pronounced as (IPA)
/ˈvɨj.ɕt͡ɕɛ/
Etymology
Inherited from Old Polish wyszcie, wyście. By surface analysis, wyjść + -ie.
New
wyjść
-
- to walk out, to leave, to exit (to exit a place on foot)
- to walk out, to leave (to end a long stay somewhere)
- to leave; to quit; to fall out (to stop having a particular state)
- to walk out, to leave (to stop associating with a particular organization or activity)
- to come from (to have an origin from a particular place)
- to come out (to become visible)
- to depart, to leave
- to fall out
- to come to light, to become clear
- to come out (to find oneself in a higher ranking upon defeating others)
- (colloquial) to come out (to be released or published and spread)
- (colloquial) to enter into force
- (colloquial) to run out (to be spent or used entirely)
- to come out (to propose something)
- to exceed, to surpass (to pass some border, real or otherwise)
- to be accepted as a base of understanding [with z (+ genitive)],
- to come out (to be the result of some work or calculation)
- to end up (to result or end somehow)
- to come out (to be represented somehow in a picture or painting)
- (colloquial) to come out, to work out (to succeed as intended)
- to log out; to leave (to stop using a particular program or internet service)
- to come across (to show some character trait, especially a negative one)
- to get married
- (colloquial) to end up (to find oneself in a particular situation)
- to come out (to make a particular move)
- to come out (by moving in a specific way for a given sports game, finding a place on the field, court, etc. from which one can make a move)
- to show support
- to come out (to get out of a difficult situation)
- to be directed, to lead somewhere
- to leave (to finish studies somewhere)
- to earn, to gain
- to be enough
- to come out (to be announced)
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Notes
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