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runaway
[ ruhn-uh-wey ]
noun
- a horse or team that has broken away from control.
- the act of running away.
- a decisive or easy victory.
- a young person, especially a teenager, who has run away from home.
adjective
- having run away; escaped; fugitive.
- (of a horse or other animal) having escaped from the control of the rider or driver.
- pertaining to or accomplished by running away or eloping:
a runaway marriage.
- easily won, as a contest:
a runaway victory at the polls.
- unchecked; rampant:
runaway prices.
- Informal. deserting or revolting against one's group, duties, expected conduct, or the like, especially to establish or join a rival group, change one's life drastically, etc.:
The runaway delegates nominated their own candidate.
Word History and Origins
Origin of runaway1
Example Sentences
She also had a stuffed kitten named John Grady Cole, the hero’s name in McCarthy’s “The Border Trilogy,” which follows three runaways who have a stolen Colt revolver.
The Union of Concerned Scientists, the National Wildlife Federation, Earth First and The Wilderness Society, among others, all published articles or ran campaigns against runaway population growth well into the late 1990s.
But when lithium batteries are corrupted, they can experience thermal runaway – meaning a cell undergoes uncontrollable temperature rises, making a fire hard to control and extinguish.
“A Trump agenda means more sickness and death caused by pollution and runaway climate change,” insisted Bill Macgavern, policy director of the Los Angeles nonprofit Clean Air Coalition.
But what seemed like a runaway competition between the two quarterbacks through fall camp ended up being “neck and neck” according to Riley.
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