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Break away   /breɪk əwˈeɪ/   Listen
Break away

verb
1.
Move away or escape suddenly.  Synonyms: break, break out.  "Three inmates broke jail" , "Nobody can break out--this prison is high security"
2.
Break off (a piece from a whole).  Synonyms: break off, chip, chip off, come off.
3.
Interrupt a continued activity.  Synonym: break.
4.
Withdraw from an organization or communion.  Synonyms: secede, splinter.
5.
Flee; take to one's heels; cut and run.  Synonyms: bunk, escape, fly the coop, head for the hills, hightail it, lam, run, run away, scarper, scat, take to the woods, turn tail.  "The burglars escaped before the police showed up"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Break away" Quotes from Famous Books



... too fast, for his party was barely out of range before a ragged volley ripped from the palace-wall; one of his men, hampered and delayed by a led horse that was trying to break away from him, was actually hit, and begged Alwa to ride back and burn the palace after all. He was grumbling still about the honor of a Rangar, when Alwa called a halt in the shelter of a deserted side street in order ...
— Rung Ho! • Talbot Mundy

... tiger's paw when trespassing upon the feast. It is a good arrangement to secure both fetlocks of a buffalo with a piece of strong cord about a foot or 16 inches apart, independently of the weaker cord which ties the animal to either a stake or tree. Should the buffalo break away during the night, it cannot wander far, as the bushes will quickly anchor the rope which confines the fore legs; the tiger would then assuredly attack the straying animal and kill it within the jungles. In such a case the drive should take place without ...
— Wild Beasts and their Ways • Sir Samuel W. Baker

... most careful instruction concerning his own body and its functions. There are a few simple observances that every human being should learn from childhood, and learn so thoroughly and so fix as a matter of habit, that he can never break away from them. ...
— The Renewal of Life; How and When to Tell the Story to the Young • Margaret Warner Morley

... break away from those oats, that's all there is about it," he went on to say, seriously. "A poor old nag of a horse never ...
— Jack Winters' Campmates • Mark Overton

... received it partly on his staff, so that it did him no particular damage. Whereupon, seeing what kind of customer he had to deal with, he dropped his staff and seized the chal with both his hands, who forthwith spurred his horse, hoping, by doing so, either to break away from him or fling him down; but it would not do—the plastramengro held on like a bull-dog, so that the Rommany chal, to escape being hauled to the ground, suddenly flung himself off the saddle, and then happened in that lane, close by the gate, such a struggle between ...
— Lavengro - The Scholar, The Gypsy, The Priest • George Borrow


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