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    Es·cape
    /əˈskāp/

    verb

    • 1. break free from confinement or control: "two burglars have just escaped from prison" Similar get awayget outrun awayrun offOpposite be capturedbe imprisoned
    • 2. fail to be noticed or remembered by (someone): "the name escaped him"

    noun

    • 1. an act of breaking free from confinement or control: "the story of his escape from a POW camp" Similar getawaybreakoutbolt for freedomrunning awayOpposite captureimprisonment
  2. Escape definition: to slip or get away, as from confinement or restraint; gain or regain liberty. See examples of ESCAPE used in a sentence.

  3. to try to prevent or avoid loss or damage when it is already too late to do so. Definition of escape verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  4. 3 days ago · escape, elude, evade mean to keep free of something. To escape is to succeed in keeping away from danger, pursuit, observation, etc.: to escape punishment. To elude implies baffling pursuers or slipping through an apparently tight net: The fox eluded the hounds. To evade is to turn aside from or go out of reach of a person or thing: to evade ...

  5. escape noun (GETTING OUT) B2. an occasion when someone succeeds in getting out of a place or a dangerous or bad situation: There was an escape from the prison last night. More examples. a narrow escape. an occasion when someone almost dies or almost has a very bad experience: They had a very narrow escape.

  6. (of a sound or utterance) to slip from or be expressed by (a person, one's lips, etc.) inadvertently. See more. noun. an act or instance of escaping. the fact of having escaped. a means of escaping: We used the tunnel as an escape. avoidance of reality: She reads mystery stories as an escape.

  7. [countable, uncountable] the act or a method of escaping from a place or an unpleasant or dangerous situation. I had a narrow escape (= I was lucky to have escaped). He had a lucky escape when his car skidded out of control. As soon as he turned his back, she would make her escape. escape from something an escape from a prisoner of war camp.

  8. n. 1. The act or an instance of escaping. 2. A means of escaping. 3. A means of obtaining temporary freedom from worry, care, or unpleasantness: Television is my escape from worry. 4. A gradual effusion from an enclosure; a leakage. 5. Biology A cultivated plant or a domesticated or confined animal that has become established in the wild. 6.

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