English edit

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Verb edit

edge out (third-person singular simple present edges out, present participle edging out, simple past and past participle edged out)

  1. (idiomatic) To defeat in a contest or a game by a narrow margin of victory.
    • 2011 January 29, Chris Bevan, “Torquay 0 - 1 Crawley Town”, in BBC[1]:
      Crawley missed two penalties but still edged out League Two Torquay to become the first non-league side to reach the FA Cup fifth round for 17 years.
  2. To gradually exclude; to push someone or something further and further into the margins until they/it is entirely outside of a space.
    • 2022, Richard Vytniorgu, “Effeminate Gay Bottoms in the West”, in Journal of Homosexuality[2], volume 70, number 10, page 2113:
      Since the Second World War and the rise of the middle-class "clone gay” in the US and a similar move away from homosexual effeminacy in Britain—often rooted in working class culture—gender nonconforming or effeminate gay males have been edged out of mainstream understandings of what it means to be gay.

Anagrams edit