List of synonyms from "break even" to synonyms from "breaking of bread"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms break out in a sweat, break even, break with, break out, break faith, break of day and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
- Break even
- Break faith
- Break in
- Break in on
- Break it to
- Break it up
- Break of day
- Break out
- Break out in a sweat
- Break promise
- Break record
- Break the ice
- Break trust
- Break up
- Break with
- Break with past
- Break with the past
- Breakage
- Breakdown
- Breakfast
- Breakfast food
- Breakfast time
- Breaking ball
- Breaking of bread
Definition of the day : « break out »
- verb happen, emerge
- verb escape
- If we bide here, who knows that some fresh tumult may not break out.
- Extract from : « The White Company » by Arthur Conan Doyle
- As to Fire in the prison, if one were to break out while he lay there?
- Extract from : « Little Dorrit » by Charles Dickens
- Yet it had sufficed that the nations should flock there for a pestilence to break out.
- Extract from : « The Three Cities Trilogy, Complete » by Emile Zola
- As it was, the effect it had upon me made him break out into execrations and menaces.
- Extract from : « Clarissa, Volume 3 (of 9) » by Samuel Richardson
- It will only be a matter of weeks—perhaps even days—it may break out to-morrow.
- Extract from : « The Harbor » by Ernest Poole
- They felt so happy there, and seemed to break out into a new life.
- Extract from : « Abbe Mouret's Transgression » by Emile Zola
- Girls are like the hawthorns; when they break out into blossom, they do all they can.
- Extract from : « Abbe Mouret's Transgression » by Emile Zola
- Sometimes they break out unexpected, like chickenpox in the 'Old Men's Home.'
- Extract from : « The Depot Master » by Joseph C. Lincoln
- She would laugh and then be silent, and then break out into laughter again.
- Extract from : « The Shadow of a Crime » by Hall Caine
- If the fever should break out this summer, Richling, will you go away?
- Extract from : « Dr. Sevier » by George W. Cable
