I.out [美 aʊt, 英 aʊt]副out often appears as the second element of certain verb structures in English (come out, keep out, knock out, etc). For translations, see the relevant verb entry (come, keep, knock, etc).
They are a hard, white and chewy, square mint-flavoured lolly, which on chewing become so sticky that they are notorious for causing fillings to come out.
The resulting reader was a mechanical tour-de-force, combining five MICR readers with a large rotating drum that forced checks dumped in the top to come out the bottom single-file.
Everyone keeps saying the had low expectations of it, but we've seen in the past film-goers with low expectations generally come out with a better than expected view of films.