winnow out
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Verb: - To remove or eliminate from consideration, selection, or a group after careful examination or sifting. The term implies a process of separating the desirable from the undesirable, the valid from the invalid, or the suitable from the unsuitable.
Usage
The verb "winnow out" is used to describe the act of carefully examining a set of options, candidates, or possibilities and removing those that do not meet the required criteria. It often involves a deliberate, thoughtful process of elimination. - It is typically followed by a direct object (what is being removed) and often uses the preposition "from" to indicate the source group. - It is commonly used in formal, analytical, or competitive contexts.
Examples
Advanced Usage
- Passive Voice: The process is often described from the perspective of what is removed.
- Several theories were winnowed out during the peer review process.
- Figurative Use: While rooted in the physical act of separating grain from chaff, it is almost exclusively used figuratively in modern English to describe any process of refinement through elimination.
Variants and Related Words
- Winnow (verb): The base verb, meaning to blow a current of air through grain to separate the chaff, or figuratively, to separate or distinguish valuable parts from worthless ones.
- The investigation will winnow the facts from the rumors.
- Winnowing (noun): The process of separating or selecting.
Synonyms
- Eliminate
- Rule out
- Screen out
- Weed out
- Cull
- Filter out
Related Phrasal Verbs
- Rule out: To eliminate from consideration. Often used interchangeably with "winnow out," though "rule out" can imply a more definitive exclusion based on a specific disqualifying factor.
- The doctor ruled out an infection as the cause.
- Screen out: To examine and remove unsuitable people or things.
- The security check screened out unauthorized individuals.
- Weed out: To remove inferior or unwanted items or people from a group.
- The tough training course is meant to weed out those who aren't committed.
Related Idioms
- Separate the wheat from the chaff: This idiom is closely related to the core meaning of "winnow out." It means to distinguish valuable people or things from worthless ones.
- The final audit will separate the wheat from the chaff in these financial reports.
Verb
- dismiss from consideration or a contest
- John was ruled out as a possible suspect because he had a strong alibi
- This possibility can be eliminated from our consideration