Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 25 de ene. de 2021 · I'd say the test is wrong. "off" and "out" are both correct. In fact, I think "out" is even a little better. "The lights went off" is what you would expect to happen when you flip the switch at the end of a work day, for instance, but if "the lights went out", we have no idea why, and the test question included "surprising", so I'd ...

  2. 4 de sept. de 2014 · 1 Answer. Sorted by: 1. Went out must come from when lights were candle or gas lighten - this the lights would go out as they couldn't exactly be turned off. A candle needs to be 'put out' manually or would 'go out' by itself. Term still applies today with things like power cuts or timed lighting. Share. Improve this answer. Follow.

  3. 23 de feb. de 2021 · Lights go off when people (or timers) make that happen using a switch. Lights go out when there is a power failure or other accident. What do you think about?

  4. I woke up when the alarm went off. 2 of lights, electricity, etc. : to stop working. The lights in the building suddenly went off. 3 : to leave a place for a new place. He went off to join the army after graduating from high school. She went off to America. 4 a : to occur or happen. The meeting went off as scheduled.

  5. 16 de feb. de 2020 · Feb 17, 2020 at 11:39. 5. In English it's common to say "the power" for "the electricity", and the phrasal verb "went off" (or even "went out") can be used if the cause is unknown and you don't want to say "turned off". Eg. "all of a sudden the power went off", "the electricity suddenly went out".

  6. 1 de jul. de 2017 · 1 Jul 2017. English (US) At the moment, there's one example that I can think of. If you were to say, "The lights went out," you could also say, "The lights went off" or "The lights turned off." They mean the same thing in that context, but if you wanted to say, "I turned off the light," you can't say "I turned out the light."

  7. 1 `go out'. When you leave a building or room, you usually say that you go out of it or go out. He threw down his napkin and went out of the room. I went out into the garden. 2 `get out'. When you leave a car, you say that you get out of it or get out. We got out of the taxi at the station.