vote out
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Verb (transitive): - To defeat or remove someone from a position through a formal vote. It specifically refers to the act of voting against a candidate, official, or proposal, resulting in their failure to be elected, re-elected, or approved.
Usage
The verb "vote out" is used with a direct object (the person or proposal being rejected). It describes the collective action of a voting body. - The primary meaning is to remove an incumbent official from office by voting for their opponent. - A secondary meaning is to reject a motion or proposal by voting against it.
Examples
- Removing a person from office:
- The council voted the mayor out after the scandal.
- Voters are threatening to vote out any representative who supports the bill.
- Rejecting a proposal:
- The committee voted the motion out in a narrow decision.
- The proposal for a new tax was voted out by the assembly.
Advanced Usage
- Passive Voice: Often used to emphasize the result for the person or item rejected.
- The incumbent senator was voted out after one term.
- The amendment was voted out before it could be debated fully.
- "Vote [someone] out of [office/a position]": A common construction specifying the position.
- They voted her out of the board of directors.
Variants and Related Words
- Oust (verb): To force someone out of a position, often but not always by voting. (e.g., )
- Defeat (verb): A more general term for beating an opponent, including in an election. (e.g., )
- Reject (verb): A general term for refusing to accept a proposal or person.
- Vote down (phrasal verb): A close synonym, especially for rejecting proposals or motions.
Synonyms
- Elect out
- Turn out
- Throw out (informal in this context)
Related Phrasal Verbs
- Vote down: To reject a proposal or motion by voting. It is often interchangeable with "vote out" for non-person items.
- The shareholders voted down the merger plan.
- Vote in: The opposite action; to elect or approve someone or something by voting.
- The public voted in a new government.
Related Idioms
- "Throw the bums out": An informal, emphatic idiom meaning to vote corrupt or incompetent officials out of office.
- The public's mood was to throw the bums out.
Verb
- thwart the passage of
- kill a motion
- he shot down the student's proposal