wring out

verb

Definitions

  1. To squeeze (wet clothing or cloth), either by twisting with one's hands, or by passing it…

    To squeeze (wet clothing or cloth), either by twisting with one's hands, or by passing it through a wringer, to remove the water.

  2. To force someone to give (something), usually truth, or money.

    • I couldn't help it. I had to tell him. He wrung it out of me.
    • They wrung an extra $500 out of us for the transfer fees.
  3. To push (an aircraft) to its performance limits

    To push (an aircraft) to its performance limits; to push the envelope.

    • Another difficulty has been that autopilots are designed for ordinary flying. They can't "wring out" a plane, being limited to about 45° in bank and pitch. Aerobatics are an impossibility.
    • Others listening to the conversation felt the same as I did, especially after having seen a local pilot really "wring" out the airplane at their local air show two weeks earlier.
    • I had no conception of what it meant to ”wring out" an airplane until I rode with that magnificent man, and I can't remember his name. After he had scorched the paint off that AT-6, he very quietly said, ”Okay, take her back to the field."

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for wring out. 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