pullout

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Archived revision by Equinox (talk | contribs) as of 23:20, 13 January 2020.
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See also: pull out

English

Etymology

From the verb phrase pull out.

Noun

pullout (plural pullouts)

  1. A withdrawal, especially of armed forces.
  2. The change of the flight of an aircraft from a dive to level flight.
  3. An object, such as a newspaper supplement, that can be pulled out from something else.
  4. (typography) Synonym of liftout (quotation given special visual treatment)
  5. An area by the side of a road where vehicles may temporarily stop in safety. Typical pullouts allow drivers and passengers to safely exit the vehicle but rarely have additional amenities.
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  6. (surfing) The ending of a period of surfing by navigating the board into or over the back of a wave.
    • 2005, Matt Warshaw, The Encyclopedia of Surfing (page 482)
      Most pullouts, then and today, are done by simply angling or pivoting the board up and over the wave crest.
    • 2015, John Engle, Surfing in the Movies: A Critical History (page 131)
      [] Machado, who turns what might seem like a handicap, that lankiness, to rubbery advantage in his sinuous carving and slackly cool pullouts.

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