takeout

Etymology
.

Adjective

 * 1)  (Of food) intended to be eaten off the premises from which it was bought.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: за вкъщи
 * French: à emporter
 * Galician: para levar
 * Italian: da asporto
 * Malay:
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: para levar, para fora
 * Romanian: la pachet
 * Russian: на вы́нос
 * Spanish: para llevar

Noun

 * 1)  Food purchased from a takeaway.
 * 2)  A stone that hits another stone, removing it from play.
 * 3)  A double of an opponent's bid, intended to invite one's partner to compete in the auction, rather than to penalise one's opponents.
 * 4)  A detailed news segment.
 * 5) * 1994, Penn Kimball, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Downsizing the news: network cutbacks in the nation's capital (page 19)
 * Takeouts on important running topics in the news are one way to add a valuable dimension to the evening news. One consequence, however, has been that there are fewer minutes available on the broadcast for hard news out of Washington.

Synonyms

 * carryout

Translations

 * Bulgarian: храна за вкъщи
 * Danish: afhentning
 * Finnish: noutoruoka
 * French: vente à emporter,
 * German: zum Mitnehmen, Takeaway
 * Japanese: テークアウト, お持ち帰り
 * Russian: на вынос
 * Spanish: comida para llevar
 * Swedish: takeaway,
 * Thai:
 * Yiddish: אַהיימוואַרג