outtake

noun
/ˈaʊtˌteɪk/US

Etymology

From Middle English outtake, outtaken, from the past participle of outtaken (“to take out”). See above. Compare earlier Middle English outnime, out-neme (“except, except for”).

  1. inherited from outtaken

Definitions

  1. A portion of a recording (a take) that is not included in the final version of a film or…

    A portion of a recording (a take) that is not included in the final version of a film or a musical album, often because it contains a mistake.

    • The DVD for that movie has ten minutes' worth of outtakes.
  2. A complete version of a recording or film that is dropped in favour of another version,…

    A complete version of a recording or film that is dropped in favour of another version, reject.

  3. An opening for outward discharge

    An opening for outward discharge; a vent.

    • The boiler is "sectional" and of the water tube type, in which the steam and water drums are arranged transversely to the flow of gases from the furnace to the outtake to chimney.
  4. + 3 more definitions
    1. To take out, remove.

    2. To except.

    3. except

      except; besides.

      • this is for everyone outtake my wife

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for outtake. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA