escape from
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Verb: - To get free from or avoid a confining situation, restraint, or undesirable circumstance. It implies a deliberate effort to break away from something constraining, threatening, or unwanted.
Usage
The verb "escape from" is used to describe the action of physically or metaphorically leaving a place, situation, or condition that is restrictive or dangerous. It emphasizes the point of origin or the thing being left behind. - It is typically followed by a noun or noun phrase indicating the source of confinement. - It often carries a connotation of difficulty, urgency, or relief.
Examples
- The prisoners managed to escape from the high-security jail.
- She needed to escape from the pressures of her demanding job.
- It's hard to escape from the city's noise and pollution.
- He tried to escape from his responsibilities, but they always found him.
Advanced Usage
- "escape from reality": To avoid thinking about real life, often through entertainment or fantasy.
- Reading fiction is her favorite way to escape from reality.
- Used in computing or mathematics to indicate avoiding a process or state.
- The program includes a command to escape from the infinite loop.
Variants and Related Words
- Escape (verb): Can often be used without "from" when the context is clear.
- The prisoner escaped at night. (Compare to: The prisoner escaped from the prison at night.)
- Escapee (noun): A person who has escaped, especially from confinement.
- The police searched for the escapee.
- Escapism (noun): The tendency to seek distraction and relief from unpleasant realities.
- His video game habit was a form of escapism.
Synonyms
- Flee from: To run away from, especially from danger.
- Break free from: To liberate oneself by force or effort.
- Get away from: To leave or escape (can be less formal).
- Shake (informal, as in the reference): To get rid of or evade someone who is following or bothering you.
Related Phrasal Verbs
- Break out of: Similar to "escape from," often used for physical locations like prisons.
- They planned to break out of the compound.
- Get out of: To leave a place or avoid an obligation (can be less formal or severe).
- I need to get out of this meeting.
Related Idioms
- "Make a break for it": To try to escape suddenly.
- When the guard looked away, the captive decided to make a break for it.
- "A narrow escape": An escape that almost did not happen or was very close to failure.
- Surviving the avalanche was a narrow escape.
Verb
- get rid of
- I couldn't shake the car that was following me