style it out
English
editVerb
editstyle it out (third-person singular simple present styles it out, present participle styling it out, simple past and past participle styled it out)
- To appear confident.
- 2015 February 21, Abigail Radnor, quoting Beverley Knight, “How I get ready: Beverley Knight”, in The Guardian[1]:
- You’ve got to fake it until you make it. It’s an oldie but a goodie, because it's true. Many people worry about walking into a room full of strangers, but you have to style it out, appear confident. Everyone will fall for it, and suddenly the reality takes over and you are confident.
- (British) To pretend not to be embarrassed; to deny that an embarrassing thing ever happened.
- 2011 April 29, Polly Hudson, “Advice for Kate Middleton: If anything goes wrong, style it out...”, in Daily Mirror[2]:
- Emergency: One trips while being taken up the aisle.
Solution: Style it out. Turn that tumble into a dance move, and keep it up all the way to the altar.
- 2012 December 12, “Not so cool now! Kate Moss tries to style it out after tripping over her heels during mid-morning stroll with husband Jamie Hince”, in Daily Mail[3]:
- 2015 October 27, Harry Fletcher, “Watch BBC newsreader Joanna Gosling style it out after missing her cue”, in Digital Spy[4]:
- Is this the smoothest newsreader ever? Joanna Gosling more than made up for missing her cue on BBC News this morning (October 27) with a suave recovery. Gosling was late to start her report, but styled it out with a smooth "belated good morning".
Related terms
edit- (deny embarrassment): play off