out of thin air
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Adverb - Without warning; appearing suddenly and unexpectedly from an unknown or seemingly nonexistent source. This phrase describes something that happens or someone who arrives in a surprising, abrupt manner, as if created from nothing.
Usage
This adverbial phrase is used to emphasize the suddenness and lack of explanation for an event or appearance. It often carries a tone of surprise or disbelief. - It typically modifies a verb (e.g., appear, come, materialize, make up). - It is used in both spoken and written English.
Examples
- The solution to the problem didn't just appear out of thin air; we had to work hard for it.
- He can create entire stories out of thin air.
- Magicians seem to pull rabbits out of thin air.
Advanced Usage
- "To pluck/pull something out of thin air": To invent or produce something, such as an idea, number, or excuse, without any basis or prior thought.
- The manager plucked that sales target out of thin air; there's no data to support it.
- "To appear/come out of thin air": To arrive or materialize very suddenly and surprisingly.
- One moment the road was empty, and the next, a deer came out of thin air.
Variants and Related Words
- Out of nowhere: A very common synonym with the same meaning.
- A car sped past us out of nowhere.
- Thin air: Used as a noun phrase, often following prepositions like , , .
- The papers vanished into thin air.
Synonyms
- Suddenly
- Unexpectedly
- Without warning
- Out of nowhere
- From nowhere
Related Idioms
- Vanish/disappear into thin air: To disappear completely and without a trace.
- My keys have vanished into thin air!
- Made of thin air: Describes something that lacks substance or a factual basis.
- His promises seem to be made of thin air.
Adverb
- without warning
- your cousin arrived out of thin air