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  • punch-out
    punch-out
    noun
    a small section of cardboard or metal surrounded by perforations so that it can be easily forced out.
  • punch out
    punch out

    Record one's time of departure from work, as in We never punch out at exactly five o'clock . This usage, dating from the 1920s, alludes to the use of a time clock. Also see punch in , def. 1.

Synonyms

punch-out

American  
[puhnch-out] / ˈpʌntʃˌaʊt /
Or punchout

noun

  1. a small section of cardboard or metal surrounded by perforations so that it can be easily forced out.

  2. Slang. a fistfight or brawl.

  3. Baseball. the air-punching gesture an umpire makes to denote a third strike, effectively ending the batter’s at-bat.

    Stein didn’t develop his signature punch-out until his third season umpiring in the minors.


punch out Idioms  
  1. Record one's time of departure from work, as in We never punch out at exactly five o'clock . This usage, dating from the 1920s, alludes to the use of a time clock. Also see punch in , def. 1.

  2. Eject from a military aircraft, as in The pilot punched out just before the plane blew up . [ Slang ; 1960s]


Etymology

Origin of punch-out

First recorded in 1925–30; noun use of verb phrase punch out

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