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Definition: Escape |
EscapeNoun1. The act of escaping physically; "he made his escape from the mental hospital"; "the canary escaped from its cage"; "his flight was an indication of his guilt". 2. An inclination to retreat from unpleasant realities through diversion or fantasy; "he escaped into romantic novels"; "his alcohol problem was a form of escapism". 3. The unwanted discharge of a fluid from some container; "they tried to stop the escape of gas from the damaged pipe"; "he had to clean up the leak". 4. A valve in a container in which pressure can build up (as a steam boiler); it opens automatically when the pressure reaches a dangerous level. 5. Nonperformance of something distasteful (as by deceit or trickery) that you are supposed to do; "his evasion of his clear duty was reprehensible"; "that escape from the consequences is possible but unattractive". 6. An avoidance of danger or difficulty; "that was a narrow escape". 7. A means or way of escaping; "hard work was his escape from worry"; "they installed a second hatch as an escape"; "their escape route". 8. A plant originally cultivated but now growing wild. Verb1. Run away from confinement; "The convicted murderer escaped from a high security prison". 2. Fail to experience; "Fortunately, I missed the hurricane". 3. Escape potentially unpleasant consequences; get away with a forbidden action; "She gets away with murder!" "I couldn't get out from under these responsibilities". 4. Be incomprehensible to; escape understanding by; "What you are seeing in him eludes me". 5. Issue or leak, as from a small opening; "Gas escaped into the bedroom". 6. Remove oneself from a familiar environment, usually for pleasure or diversion; "We escaped to our summer house for a few days"; "The president of the company never manages to get away during the summer". Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. |
Date "escape" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1010. (references) |
Note: Escape \Es*cape"\, transitive verb. [imperfect & past participle. Escaped; Escaping.]. (references) |
| Domain | Definition |
Computing | ESCAPE |
Aerospace | Of a particle or larger body: to achieve an escape velocity and a flightpath outward from a primary body so as neither to fall back to the body nor to orbit it. (references) |
Biology & Biotechnology | An exotic plant or animal later found in the wild. Source: European Union. (references) |
Dream Interpretation | To dream of escape from injury or accidents, is usually favorable. If you escape from some place of confinement, it signifies your rise in the world from close application to business. To escape from any contagion, denotes your good health and prosperity. If you try to escape and fail, you will suffer from the design of enemies, who will slander and defraud you. Source: Ten Thousand Dreams Interpreted .... |
Industry | Term which indicates precautionary measures taken in the use of modern looms to prevent warp breakages. Source: European Union. (references) |
Mining | A. Eng. A second or additional shaft by which miners may get out of the mine in case of accident to the other shafts. Also an upcast; escape pit; escapeway. b. A wasteway for discharging the entire flow of a strea. (references) |
Multilingual Slang | Russian (s'ebat'sya). (references) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Journey's seventh album, Escape, was released in August of 1981 on the Columbia Records label. With three hit singles, Escape became Journey's biggest album yet, and remains one of their most popular and best-reviewed works-to-date.
Track listing
- "Don't Stop Believin'"
- "Stone in Love"
- "Who's Crying Now"
- "Keep on Runnin'"
- "Still They Ride"
- "Escape"
- "Lay it Down"
- "Dead or Alive"
- "Mother, Father"
- "Open Arms"
Personnel
- Steve Perry - Vocals
- Neal Schon - Guitar, Vocals
- Steve Smith - Drums
- Jonathan Cain - Guitar, Keyboards, Vocals
- Wally Buck - Engineer, Assistant Engineer
- Kevin Elson - Producer
- Herbie Herbert - Management
- Bob Ludwig - Mastering, Remastering
- Mike "Clay" Stone - Producer
- Ross Valory - Bass, Vocals
- Jim Welch - Photography, Package Design, Cover Design, Visual Concept
- Brian Lee - Remastering
- Stanley Mouse - Illustrations
Charti positions
Billboard Music Charts (North America) - album1981 Pop Albums No. 1 1983 The Billboard 200 No. 139 1984 The Billboard 200 No. 156Billboard (North America) - singles1981 Don't Stop Believin' Mainstream Rock No. 8 1981 Stone In Love Mainstream Rock No. 13 1981 Who's Crying Now Mainstream Rock No. 4 1981 Don't Stop Believin' Pop Singles No. 9 1981 Who's Crying Now Pop Singles No. 4 1982 Open Arms Adult Contemporary No. 7 1982 Still They Ride Adult Contemporary No. 37 1982 Open Arms Mainstream Rock No. 35 1982 Still They Ride Mainstream Rock No. 47 1982 Open Arms Pop Singles No. 2 1982 Still They Ride Pop Singles No. 19Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Escape."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Escape Velocity means two things:This is a Wikipedia disambiguation page. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and fix it.
- the term escape velocity in physics
- the computer game Escape Velocity
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Escape Velocity."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Escape velocity can also mean Escape Velocity (computer game). An escape velocity is the minimum speed at which an object without propulsion can move away from a source of a gravitational field indefinitely if there is no friction. (This definition may need modification for the practical problem of two or more sources in some cases. In any case, the object is assumed to be a point with a mass that is negligible compared with that of the source of the field, usually an excellent approximation.) It is commonly described as the speed needed to break free from a gravitational field, but this is inaccurate because gravitational fields are infinite in extent.One somewhat counterintuitive feature of escape velocity is that it is independent of direction, so that "velocity" is a misnomer; it is a scalar quantity and would more accurately be called "escape speed".
The simplest way of deriving the formula for escape velocity is to use conservation of energy.
Defined a bit more formally "escape velocity" is the initial speed required to go from an initial point in a gravitational potential field to infinity with a residual velocity of zero, relative to the field. In common usage, the initial point is a point on the surface of a planet or moon. It is a theoretical quantity, because it assumes that an object is fired into space like a bullet. Instead propulsion is almost always used to get into "space". It is usually in "space" that the idea gets a more concrete meaning. On the surface of Earth the escape velocity is about 11 kilometres per second. However, at 9000 km from the surface in "space," it is slightly less than 7.1 km/s. Continual acceleration from the surface to attain that speed at that height is possible. At no time would the "escape velocity" of 11 km/s be attained; yet at that height, even with zero propulsion now, the object can move away from Earth indefinitely.
For a simple case of escape velocity from a single body, escape velocity can be calculated as follows:
where is the escape velocity, G is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the body being escaped from, "m" is the mass of the escaping body (cancels out), and r is the distance between the center of the body and the point for which escape velocity is being calculated.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Escape velocity."
| The following table is compiled from various sources, across various languages. When English abbreviations or acronyms come from a non-English source, this is noted. | |||
| Entry | Source | Expression | Field |
ESCAPE | English | Entangled Sulphur and CArbon cycles in Phaeocystis-denominated Ecosystems project | Environment |
| ESC | English | Escape character | Computing, Meteorology & Standards |
Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references). | |||
Synonyms: EscapeSynonyms: dodging (n), escape cock (n), escape valve (n), escapism (n), evasion (n), flight (n), leak (n), leakage (n), outflow (n), relief valve (n), safety valve (n), break loose (v), elude (v), get away (v), get by (v), get off (v), get out (v), miss (v). (additional references) |
| Context | Synonyms within Context (source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus). |
Avoidance | Beat a retreat; turn tail, turn one's back; take to one's heels; runaway, run for one's life; cut and run; be off like a shot; fly, flee; fly away, flee away, run away from; take flight, take to flight; desert, elope; make off, scamper off, sneak off, shuffle off, sheer off; break away, tear oneself away, slip away, slink away, steel away, make away from, scamper away from, sneak away from, shuffle away from, sheer away from; slip cable, part company, turn one's heel; sneak out of, play truant, give one the go by, give leg bail, take French leave, slope, decamp, flit, bolt, abscond, levant, skedaddle, absquatulate, cut one's stick, walk one's chalks, show a light pair of heels, make oneself scarce; escape; go away; (depart); abandon; reject. |
Avolation, flight; escape; retreat; recoil; departure; rejection. | |
Dereliction of Duty | Verb: violate; break, break through; infringe; set aside, set at naught; encroach upon, trench upon; trample on, trample under foot; slight, neglect, evade, renounce, forswear, repudiate; wash one's hands of; escape, transgress, fail. |
Egress | Exude, transude; leak, run through, out through; percolate, transcolate; egurgitate; strain, distill; perspire, sweat, drain, ooze; filter, filtrate; dribble, gush, spout, flow out; well, well out; pour, trickle; (water in motion); effuse, extravasate, disembogue, discharge itself, debouch; come forth, break forth; burst out, burst through; find vent; escape. |
Liberation | Gain one's liberty, obtain one's liberty, acquire one's liberty; get rid of, get clear of; deliver oneself from; shake off the yoke, slip the collar; break loose, break prison; tear asunder one's bonds, cast off trammels; escape. |
Deliverance; redemption, extrication, acquittance, absolution; acquittal; escape;. | |
Safety | Verb: be safe; Adjective:; keep one's head above water, tide over, save one's bacon; ride out the storm, weather the storm; light upon one's feet, land on one's feet; bear a charmed life; escape. |
Noun: safety, security, surety, impregnability; invulnerability, invulnerableness; Adjective:; danger past, danger over; storm blown over; coast clear; escape; means of escape; blow valve, safety valve, release valve, sniffing valve; safeguard, palladium. | |
| Source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus. | |
Crosswords: Escape |
| English words defined with "escape": escape hatch, escape velocity ♦ fire escape ♦ Voluntary escape. (references) |
| Specialty definitions using "escape": assistance by a public official in the escape of prisoners, assistance in the escape of prisoners, AV junctional escape rhythm ♦ cone of escape, critical level of escape ♦ escape apparatus, escape rocket, escape sequence, escape set, escape speed, escape tower ♦ level of escape ♦ TOOTH CUTTER, ESCAPE WHEEL ♦ velocity of escape, Velocity, escape. (references) |
| Etymologies containing "escape": subterfuge. (references) |
| Non-English Usage: "Escape" is also a word in the following languages with English translations in parentheses. Portuguese (blow-off, detent, escape, escapement, exhaust, leakage), Spanish (avoidance, blowoff, blowout, elopement, escape, escapement, exhaust, exhaust pipe, flight, fuite, getaway, leak, leakage). |
| Domain | Usage | |
Screenplays | We haven't tried not trying to escape. (Chicken Run; writing credit: Peter Lord; Nick Park) So all we have to do is get in, break up the wedding, steal the princess, make our escape after I kill Count Rugen (The Princess Bride; writing credit: William Goldman) It's a prison word for escape. But it doesn't stop around here (Midnight Express; writing credit: Billy Hayes; William Hoffer) Brown-skinned girls who inflame your senses with their play, cool yellow-haired women who entice and escape you, gentle ones who serve you, slender ones who torment you, the mothers who bore and suckled you; all women whom God created out of the teeming fullness of the earth, are yours in the love of one woman (Rembrandt; writing credit: Carl Zuckmayer; June Head) Escape the building - dead (The Invisible Man; writing credit: Craig Silverstein; Jonathan Glassner) | |
Lyrics | You can run, you can hide, but you can't escape my love (Escape; performing artist: Enrique Iglesias) I couldn't escape the memory (Run-Around; performing artist: Blues Traveler) And I'm trying to escape (One Last Breath; performing artist: Creed) I had to escape (I Drove All Night; performing artist: Cyndi Lauper) Still I can't escape the ghost of you (Ordinary World; performing artist: Duran Duran) | |
Clever | The cross of the Legion of Honor has been conferred on me. However, few escape that distinction. (references; author: Mark Twain) | |
Movie/TV Titles | Escape (1973) The Last Escape (1970) Le Escape Goat (1967) Escape from Hell Island (1965) Monstrous Escape (1965) | |
Song Titles | Escape (The Pina Colada Song) (performing artist: Rupert Holmes) | |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | ||
| Domain | Title | ||
Books | |||
Periodicals |
| ||
Theater & Movies | |||
Music |
| ||
High Tech |
| ||
Consumer Goods | |||
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Thumbnail | Description & Credit | Thumbnail | Description & Credit |
![]() | Astronaut Escape Testing. Credit: NASA. | ![]() | Apollo Launch Escape System in Wind Tunnel. Credit: NASA. |
![]() | Photograph of Nazi submariner foot trying to get out of submarine escape hatch Office of Strategic Services project to find sunken vessels with new technology Ray Tryon and John O. Phillips worked off USCGC GENTIAN in 1944 Example of early surface controlled ocean bottom photography. Credit: Coast & Geodetic Survey Historical Image Collection. | ![]() | The winch operator is hauling in the cables to close the net. This closes the bottom of the net such that it is now like a purse. The fish no longer have any way to escape. Credit: Fisheries. |
![]() | A combination turtle excluder device/bycatch reduction device manufactured by Saunders Marine Machine Shop. Fish escape by swimming forward and out of the large holes in the net. Shrimp are swept into the bag at the end of the net and cannot swim out. Credit: Fisheries. | ![]() | Bar herring weir near Eastport, Maine; escape of fish prevented by receding tide From a photograph by T. W. Smillie. Credit: National Marine Fisheries Historical Image Collection. |
![]() | Diver riding a shrimp net watches a turtle escape through the excluder device. Credit: National Undersea Research Program (NURP). | ![]() | Captioned measured drawing of the 1984 and 1986 planimetric views of the top deck. The 1986 plan adds objects on the deck that were not originally recorded during the 1984 project. Delineated by Larry V. Nordby, Jerry L. Livingston, 1984; Larry V. Nordby, 1986. Drawings photographically reproduced and spliced onto the HAER Sheet by Robbyn Jackson, 1991. (Reproduction Number: HAER HI-13, sheet 3 of 4) This 1916 battleship is the final resting place for many of the 1,177 USS Arizona crewmen who died on December 7, 1941--the day of the Japanese air attack on the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor. Hit by a 1,760-pound bomb shortly after 8:00 a.m., the ship sank in less than nine minutes, leaving very little time for the crew to escape. By the end of the attack, the Pacific Fleet had lost many ships and more than two thousand personnel. The attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into World War II. The USS Arizona received National Historic Landmark designation in 1989. Credit: Library of Congress. |
![]() | Pilot of the Confederate Army armed transport Planter, who ran his ship out of Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, in the early morning of 13 May 1862 and delivered her to Federal forces. The Planter carried several other black men, women and children to freedom in this daring escape. Credit: NAVY. | ![]() | Crewman A.L. Rosenkotter of USS V-5 (SC-1) demonstrates the use of the submarine's after escape hatch and the emergency escape "lung", during V-5's trials, July 1930. In 1931, V-5 was renamed and redesignated, becoming USS Narwhal (SS-167). Credit: NAVY. |
Source: pictures compiled by the editor from various references; see picture credits. | |||
![]() | ![]() |
| "Fire escape" by Mari Stobie Commentary: "Fire escape behind a bakery." | "Escape 2" by Luiz Gustavo Sales Commentary: "Siri furioso em fuga..." |
Source: photographs selected by the editor, with permission from the photographers. | |
| Author | Quotation |
Abraham Lincoln | Fellow citizens, we cannot escape history. |
Author Unknown | If you chase two rabbits, both will escape. |
Elbert Hubbard | To escape criticism -- do nothing, say nothing, be nothing. |
Horace | What fugitive from his country can also escape from himself. |
| Once a word has been allowed to escape, it cannot be recalled. | |
Peter De Vries | Gluttony is an emotional escape, a sign something is eating us. |
Ralph Waldo Emerson | See only that thou work and thou canst not escape the reward. |
Sir Walter Scott | Faces that have charmed us the most escape us the soonest. |
| The faces that have charmed us the most escape us the soonest. | |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | |
| Author | Date | Quotation |
John Locke | 1690 | This, if barely so, is rather mockery than relief; and men can never be secure from tyranny, if there be no means to escape it till they are perfectly under it: and therefore it is, that they have not only a right to get out of it, but to prevent it. (Second Treatise of Government) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| Title | Author | Quote |
Emma | Austen, Jane | Escape, however, was not his plan |
Alice in Wonderland | Carroll, Lewis | So she tucked it away under her arm, that it might not escape again, and went back to have a little more conversation with her friend |
Scarlet Letter | Hawthorne, Nathaniel | But she said it with a hesitation that did not escape the acuteness of the child |
Les Miserables | Hugo, Victor | Certainly, such a man deserved to escape political opinions |
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man | Joyce, James | No escape. |
Grapes of Wrath | Steinbeck, John | But there were things he could not escape. |
Gulliver's Travels | Swift, Jonathan | I longed to see the ocean, which must be the only scene of my escape, if ever it should happen |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| Subject | Topic | Quote |
Health | Albumin is smaller and therefore more likely to escape through the filters of the kidney, called glomeruli. (references) | |
Because sarcoidosis can escape diagnosis or be mistaken for several other diseases, we can only guess at how many people are affected. (references) | ||
The smallest blood vessels (capillaries) become excessively permeable (“leaky”), allowing the fluid component to escape from the blood vessels. (references) | ||
Business | Mexico City also offers many nearby points of interest that can be visited in one or two days to escape the big city. (references) | |
Children | Hong Kong | One youth died in April 2000 during an attempted escape from a detention center. (references) |
Dominican Republic | There are several church-run shelters that provide refuge to children who escape prostitution. (references) | |
Brazil | In the large urban centers, children, principally girls, who leave home to escape abuse or sexual exploitation often prostituted themselves on the streets in order to survive. (references) | |
Civil Liberties | Korea | The regime reportedly retaliates against the relatives of some of those who manage to escape. (references) |
Sierra Leone | More than an estimated 750,000 citizens remained displaced internally or had fled the country to escape the continuing insurgency. (references) | |
Saint Lucia | Immediately after the attack, the police arrested a 20-year-old male, who was rescued from a church mob as he tried to escape the scene of the incident. (references) | |
Economic History | Costa Rica | Defendants in a number of major cases have managed to escape the country during the years it can take for a verdict to be reached. (references) |
Switzerland | Being so closely linked to the economies of Western Europe and the U.S., Switzerland has not been able to escape the slowdown being experienced in these countries. (references) | |
Kuwait | Aside from the few units that were able to escape to Saudi Arabia, including a majority of the air force, all of this equipment was either destroyed or taken by the Iraqis. (references) | |
Human Rights | India | The police state that he was killed while trying to escape. (references) |
Colombia | FARC inmates said that FARC commanders had orchestrated the escape. (references) | |
Mexico | This was the second major escape from the Mexicali prison in 2 months. (references) | |
Minorities | Laos | Some international observers claim that governmental policies aimed at assimilating the Hmong into the larger society--such as regional boarding schools--are not respectful of Hmong native culture; others see this approach as an escape from centuries of poverty. (references) |
Women | Philippines | The absence of divorce under the law and limited job opportunities combine to limit the ability of both poor and wealthy women to escape destructive relationships. (references) |
Kuwait | In October the court threw out a case of a runaway maid who was reportedly picked up by two rapists and held for 4 days, because she did not cry for help or attempt to escape when left alone by the alleged rapists. (references) | |
Worker Rights | Japan | In any case, few spoke Japanese well, making escape even more difficult. (references) |
Pakistan | Bonded laborers who escape often face retaliation from former employers. (references) | |
Turkey | Women who attempt to escape their trafficking often were beaten, raped, or killed. (references) | |
Lexicography | Devil's Dictionary | GHOUL, n. A demon addicted to the reprehensible habit of devouring the dead. The existence of ghouls has been disputed by that class of controversialists who are more concerned to deprive the world of comforting beliefs than to give it anything good in their place. In 1640 Father Secchi saw one in a cemetery near Florence and frightened it away with the sign of the cross. He describes it as gifted with many heads an an uncommon allowance of limbs, and he saw it in more than one place at a time. The good man was coming away from dinner at the time and explains that if he had not been "heavy with eating" he would have seized the demon at all hazards. Atholston relates that a ghoul was caught by some sturdy peasants in a churchyard at Sudbury and ducked in a horsepond. (He appears to think that so distinguished a criminal should have been ducked in a tank of rosewater.) The water turned at once to blood "and so contynues unto ys daye." The pond has since been bled with a ditch. As late as the beginning of the fourteenth century a ghoul was cornered in the crypt of the cathedral at Amiens and the whole population surrounded the place. Twenty armed men with a priest at their head, bearing a crucifix, entered and captured the ghoul, which, thinking to escape by the stratagem, had transformed itself to the semblance of a well known citizen, but was nevertheless hanged, drawn and quartered in the midst of hideous popular orgies. The citizen whose shape the demon had assumed was so affected by the sinister occurrence that he never again showed himself in Amiens and his fate remains a mystery. |
Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits. | ||
| Speaker | Phrase(s) |
David Berkowitz | Bad thoughts or sinful thoughts come to everyone. But the Bible says that God makes a way of escape when someone has a bad thought, they can call on the Lord and the Lord will deliver them from that. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
| Speaker | Term | Phrase(s) |
George Washington | 1789-1797 | Numerous as are the providential blessings which demand our grateful acknowledgments, the abundance with which another year has again rewarded the industry of the husbandman is too important to escape recollection. |
Andrew Jackson | 1829-1837 | The officers and agents of the General Government might not always have the discretion to abstain from intermeddling with State concerns, and if they did they would not always escape the suspicion of having done so. |
Grover Cleveland | 1885-1889; 1893-1897 | Our relations with the Indians located within our border impose upon us responsibilities we can not escape. |
Harry S. Truman | 1945-1953 | Prophets of doom predicted that the United States could not escape a runaway inflation during the war and an economic collapse after the war. |
Dwight Eisenhower | 1953-1961 | More than escape from death, it is a way of life. |
John F. Kennedy | 1961-1963 | We are not neglecting the safeguards provided by peril points, an escape clause, or the National Security Amendment. |
Lyndon B. Johnson | 1963-1969 | This prosperity has enabled millions to escape the poverty that they would have otherwise had the last few years. |
Ronald Reagan | 1981-1989 | Well, too often it has only made poverty harder to escape. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| "Escape" is generally used as a lexical verb (infinitive) -- approximately 56.58% of the time. "Escape" is used about 4,387 times out of a sample of 100 million words spoken or written in English. Its rank is based on over 700,000 words used in the English language. Some parts-of-speech are not covered due to the samples used by the British National Corpus. (note: percents less than one-hundredth of one percent have been omitted) |
| Parts of Speech | Percent | Usage per 100 Million Words | Rank in English |
| Lexical Verb (infinitive) | 56.58% | 2,482 | 3,634 |
| Noun (singular) | 39.55% | 1,735 | 4,848 |
| Lexical Verb (base form) | 3.87% | 170 | 23,898 |
| Total | 100.00% | 4,387 | N/A |
Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.
Expressions using "escape": air escape ♦ assistance by a public official in the escape of prisoners ♦ assistance in the escape of prisoners ♦ attempt to escape ♦ attempted escape ♦ AV junctional escape rhythm ♦ data link escape ♦ emergency escape windows ♦ escape apparatus ♦ escape artist ♦ escape attention ♦ escape by a hairbreadth ♦ escape by the skin of one's teeth ♦ escape character ♦ escape chute ♦ escape cock ♦ escape code ♦ escape expert ♦ escape from ♦ escape from prison ♦ escape from smb.'s grasp ♦ escape from the jaws of death ♦ escape hatch ♦ escape key ♦ escape ladder ♦ escape mechanism ♦ escape notice ♦ Escape pipe ♦ Escape Reaction ♦ escape reading ♦ escape recognition ♦ escape route ♦ escape sequence ♦ escape set ♦ escape slide ♦ escape smb.'s attention ♦ escape smb.'s lips ♦ escape smth. ♦ Escape valve ♦ escape velocity ♦ Escape wheel ♦ escape without a scratch ♦ evasion and escape ♦ fire escape ♦ hairbreadth escape ♦ have a hairbreadth escape ♦ have a narrow escape ♦ he had a narrow escape ♦ help smb. to escape ♦ helping to escape ♦ let escape ♦ letting escape ♦ make one's escape ♦ narrow escape ♦ Tumor Escape ♦ velocity of escape ♦ voluntary escape ♦ way of escape. Additional references. | |
| Hyphenated Usage | |
Beginning with "escape": escape-committees, escape-kit, escape-proof, escape-route, escape-type. | |
Ending with "escape": fire-escape. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
| The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com. |
| Expression | Frequency per Day | Expression | Frequency per Day |
ford escape | 1,636 | escape from alcatraz triathlon | 78 |
escape | 873 | maine escape | 75 |
great escape | 866 | escape club | 73 |
escape from monkey island | 236 | ford escape review | 73 |
escape velocity | 217 | 2003 ford escape | 72 |
ape escape | 164 | escape late | 69 |
2 ape escape | 160 | escape trail | 66 |
dillinger escape plan | 157 | great escape six flag | 59 |
escape from monkey island walk through | 150 | fire escape | 58 |
escape from alcatraz | 131 | escape lyrics | 57 |
great escape lake george | 119 | escape steak | 57 |
escape artist | 119 | great escape amusement park | 57 |
backyard escape | 109 | escape great plant | 57 |
sea escape | 95 | escape your shape | 56 |
ford escape hybrid | 94 | escape great theater | 54 |
simple escape | 86 | used ford escape | 52 |
escape sail boat | 85 | 2004 escape ford | 50 |
fire escape ladder | 85 | weekend escape | 48 |
ford escape accessory | 84 | escape from monkey island cheat | 47 |
escape from new york | 81 | fire escape ladders | 46 |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Language | Translations for "escape"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses. | |
Afrikaans | ontsnap (flee), ontkom aan (flee). (various references) | |
Albanian | më del, arratis (guy, Lam), arratisem (break, break out, decamp, elope, evade, run off, scat, scoot, sling one's hook, take away, take flight), arratisje (break, debacle, decampment, elopement, escapement, evasion, flight, leg-bail, scamper, scape), dalje (egress, egression, emergence, emersion, eruption, exit, leakage, orifice, out, outcome, outcrop, outgo, outlet, recourse, recovery, rise, safety valve, salience, salient, shoot, vent), derdh (discharge, disgorge, dump, effuse, ejaculate, eject, empty out, found, outpour, pay in, pour, pour off, pour out, reject, run, scatter, shed, slop, spill, strew, tap, tip off, upset), derdhje (cast, casting, debouchment, effusion, ejaculation, ejection, inflow, influent, influx, outfall, outpouring, pour, spill), ik (begone, blast off, clear off, depart, exit, fly away, get along, get away, get out, give the guy to, go, go away, go off, go out, hence, leave, make away, make off, make one's bow, make oneself scarce, move away, pass, pass off, push off, retire, run away, run off, shoot through, take away, take off), arrati (escapade, runaway), kalim (crossing, cut, devolution, going, jump, lapse, negotiation, orifice, pass, passage, passageway, passing, release, switch over, transfer, transference, transit, transition), vetmi (desolation, oneness, privacy, solitude), më del nga mendja, më shpëton, prehje (repose), rrjedh (accrue, arise, come, come from, course, derive, descend, dote, flow, flow down, flow from, flux, leak, ooze, outflow, proceed, pump, result, run, spring, trickle), rrjedhje (derivation, dotage, dribble, efflux, effusion, flow, flowing, flux, leak, leakage, ooze, outflow), shmangem (circumvent, deflect, depart, deviate, diverge, dodge, duck, eschew, fence, fend off, fight shy of, forbear, funk, give a wide berth, glance, jink, jump, keep one's distance, leapfrog, Miss, Parry, refrain, shirk, shun, sidestep, steer clear of, tergiversate, wander), shpëtim (consolation, deliverance, refuge, rescue, salvation, save, saving), shpëtoj (bring off, bring through, carry through, creep out, deliver, elude, extricate, flee, get away, get off the hook, get out, get rid, get rid of, heal, preserve, rescue, rid, salvage, save, skip, spare), ikje (back track, backtrack, departure, exit, getaway, go off, leg-bail, outgo, parting, passing, recession). (various references) | |
Arabic | فرار (bolt, elopement, escapade, flight, scamper, stampede), فر (abscond, bolt, break away, decamp, elope, flee, flight, fly, get away, get free, get off, run away, run off, slope, take flight, take to one's heels), مهرب (bootlegger, pusher, trafficker), هارب (absconder, fleet, receding, run away, scampish), هرب (abscond, contraband, drive away, elope, fled, flee, fleeing, fly, get away, get out of, powder, put to flight, run away, run first, run from smb., run off, shun, slope, smuggle, take flight, take to one's heels, tamper, traffic, turn tail), نجاة (salvation), نجا (come through, lick into shape, rap, ride out, shave), وسيلة فرار, غاب عن الذاكرة (slip), تهرب من الواقع, تخلص من (clear off, disembarrass, disengage, disposal, dispose of, ditch, do dispose of, doff, drown, elimination, exorcise, exorcize, free, get out of, get rid of, jettison, liquidate, mop up, outgrow, polish up, put off, rid, scrap, sell up, shake, shake off, slough, turn, turn off, weed, weed out, work off), خلاص (deliverance, riddance, salvation), إنبعث (emanate, emit, exhale, issue, regenerate, waft), إرتشح (infiltrate), أفلت. (various references) | |
Bulgarian | спасяване (redemption, rescue, retrieval, retrieve, save, saving), освобождавам се от (clear off, dispense with, eliminate), ескейпизъм (escapism), бягство от действителността (escapism, ivory tower), бягство (bunk, flight, flying, getaway, runway), преливник на язовирна стена, изтръгвам се, изтичане (discharge, effluence, efflux, effusion, expiration, expiry, flow, fluxion, issuance, issue, leak, leakage, outflow, outgo, outlet, seepage, termination), изтичам (determine, expire, finish, issue, leak, outflow, run, run off, run out, sluice, wear through), измъквам се (fink, get out of, hike, recede, ride up, skin away, skip, skulk off, slip off, slope, steal away, steal out, unthread, weasel, work off), избягване (elopement, elusion, escapade, evasion), избягвам (abscond, break loose, break out, circumnavigate, dodge, elope, elude, evade, gallop away, get away, get off, get out, go off, make a break for it, mizzle, obviate, prevent, run, run away, run off, scarper, scuttle away, shrink away, shun, skirt around, skitter, take flight), изплъзвам се неволно, изплъзвам се (run off, slip away, slip off, slip out). (various references) | |
Chinese | 逃走 (flee), 逃避 (evade, shirk), 逃之夭夭 (make a getaway), 逃命, 逸 (leisurely, outstanding), 避 (avoid, flee, leave, shun, to hide, to keep away, to leave), 竄 (flee, leap, run away). (various references) | |
Czech | vyváznout (pull through), vytékat (issue, run), utéci (abscond, boil over, elope, flee, run away, run off, scape, take off), upláchnout (bilk, do a bunk, pop off, scape), prchnout, útìk (elopement, flight, getaway, rout, run, scape), únik (discharge, elusion, getaway, issue, leak, scape). (various references) | |
Danish | undkomme (flee), undfly (flee). (various references) | |
Dutch | ontsnapping (exhaust), ontsnappen (flee), ontkomen (flee), ontgaan (flee). (various references) | |
Esperanto | eskapo, eskapi (flee). (various references) | |
Faeroese | sleppa (allow, drop, flee, leave, let, overthrow, release). (various references) | |
Farsi | فرارکردن (Abscond, Elope, Flight, Scape, Skedaddle, Stampede), فرار (Breakaway, Desertion, Evasive, Guy, Lam, Scape), گریز (Allusion, Desertion, Digression, Evasion, Flight, Guy, Jink, Scamper, Scuttle, Subterfuge, Truancy), گریختن (Abscond, Desert, Runaway, Shun, Skedaddle, Slip), خلاصی جستن , خلاصی (Quit, Rescue, Riddance), جان بدربردن , رهاءی جستن , رهاءی (Deliverance, Delivery, Release, Rescue, Riddance, Salvation), رستن (Grow), دررفتن (Abscond, Scuttle). (various references) | |
Finnish | päästä karkuun (flee, get away). (various references) | |
French | s'échapper, échapper. (various references) | |
German | entweichen (avoid, elude, evade, leak, run away, to escape), entkommen (elude, evade, get away, getaway, to escape). (various references) | |
Greek | δραπετεύω (abscond, break away, get away, run away, slink, steal), διαφυγή (leakage). (various references) | |
Hebrew | להנצל (be rescued, be saved, survive), ברח, בריחה (bankruptcy, desertion, flight), הנצלות (saving, survival), החלצות (getting out of trouble, volunteering), המלטות (rescue), פלטה (remmant), ניסה (flight), לברוח (flee, fling off, get away, make haste, make off, run, run away, run off, scamper, take flight, take to ones heels, turn tail), מלוט (deliverance, extrication, rescue, salvation), להחלץ (get out of), להשתמט (dodge, eschew, evade, malinger, neglect, shirk, swing the lead, temporize), להמלט (flee, fly, get away, make off, run away, take to ones heels), לערוק (bolt, desert, flee, rat, renegade, tergiversate), לפלוט (blurt, deliver, disgorge, eject, emit, slip, spew, throw up, vomit), מנוס (flight, refuge, retreat, way out), מפלט (asylum, haven, refuge, retreat, shelter), לנוס (flee, fly, turn tail). (various references) | |
Hungarian | szökés (desertion, elopement, flyer, flying, get-out), menekülés (flight, flying, getaway, readiest means of escape, readiest way of escape, runaway, scuttle). (various references) | |
Indonesian | pelolosan, pelarian (get away), membolos (desert, play-truant), kelepasan (freedom, the way out). (various references) | |
Irish | éalaigh. (various references) | |
Italian | sfuggire (avoid, elope, shirk, slip, slip out), scarico (discharge, discharging, drainage, dumping, exhaust, flat, outgo, outlet, plughole, unloaded, unloading), evasione (breakaway, elopement, evasion, flight, fuite, gaolbreak, gaolbreaking, get away, getaway, jailbreak, jailbreaking, transaction), evadere (bilk, despatch, dispatch, evade, get away, run away). (various references) | |
Japanese Kanji | 逃走 (desertion, flight), 逃避 (evasion, flight), 逃亡, 脱走 (desertion), 脱出. (various references) | |
Japanese Katakana | たかとび (flight, high jump), にげば (refuge), にげ (evasion, getaway), かくちょう (apex of a shell, dignified, enlargement, expansion, extension, noble, umbo), いっそう (a clean sweep, a pair, all the more, master sergeant, much more, one ship or boat, scamper away, scud, still more), いっしゅつ (excelling, prominence), ろうえい (disclosure, leakage, recitation), エスケープ , とうそう (chilblains, conflict, desertion, faction, flight, frostbite, smallpox, strife, variola), とうひ (equal ratio, evasion, flight, justice, pitchers fly, propriety, right or wrong, scalp, spruce tree, suppression of bandits), とうぼう, とんずら (fleeing), とんそう (fleeing), だっそう (desertion), だっしゅつ. (various references) | |
Korean | 도주. (various references) | |
Manx | shaghney (avert, avoid, circumvent, circumvention, defer, deferment, delay, dodge, elude, eschew, evade, obviate, postponement, prevent, renounce, renunciation, repudiate, shirk, shirking, shun, turn away, varnish), scapail (abscond, absconding, abscondment, avoid, elude). (various references) | |
Norwegian | unnslippe, unngå (avoid, evade), rømning, flukt (flight). (various references) | |
Papiamen | hui (flee, run away). (various references) | |
Pig Latin | escapeay.(various references) | |
Portuguese | escapar (bypass, come off, dodge, evade, flee, get away, get away with, leave out, omit, overlook, run away, run off). (various references) | |
Romanian | fugi (career, chase, collide, course, dash, disappear, elope, flee, fly, fly off, give way, make off, make one's escape, pack off, run, scamper, scatter, scuttle away, take oneself to flight), evada (break away, break out, flee, get away, make one's escape, make one's getaway). (various references) | |
Romansch | fugir (to escape). (various references) | |
Russian | отделаться (argue away, brush aside), избавление (deliverance, riddance), избежать (avoid, get away), избегать переход, истечение (effluence, efflux, effusion, emanation, expiry, flowing, flux, outflow), переход (conversion, crosswalk, jump, junction, pasage, switch over, transiting, transition, trek), побег (bine, escapade, getaway, imp, jailbreak, offset, offshoot, scion, shoot, slip, sprig, sprout, tiller), бежать (flee, race, run, run away, scoot), давать утечку, миновать (be over, pass), ускользать (elude, evade, slink, slip, slip away, slunk, steal away), выпуск (edition, eduction, emission, exhaust, installment, instalment, issue, number, outlet, output, scavenging, turn out), выход (egress, egression, emergence, escapement, exit, issuance, issue, loose, orifice, out, outcome, outing, outlet, recourse, runout, safety valve, secession, signoff, sign-off, turn out, walkout, way out, way-out, yield), вырываться (get free), спасательный (life-saving, rescue, salvational, wrecking), спасение (rescue, salvage, salvation, salvations, saving), спастись, утечка (efflux, leak, leakage, outage, seepage, spillage, ullage, wastage), утечь (leak), бегство (bunk, escapement, flight, getaway, leg-bail, scamper, scape). (various references) | |
Scottish | tèarainn (rescue). (various references) | |
Serbo-Croatian | za spasavanje (rescue), spasavanje (rescue, salvage, salvation), prebeći, pobeći (break out, elope, flee, get away, make off, run, run away, run off, take flight), izbeći (avoid, dodge, eschew, evade, flinch), isteći (expire, lapse, run out), ispuštanje, bekstvo (elopement, escapement, getaway, lam, rout). (various references) | |
Spanish | escape (avoidance, blowoff, blowout, elopement, escapement, exhaust, exhaust pipe, flight, fuite, getaway, leak, leakage), escaparse (abscond, bilk, break away, break out, flee, get away, get out, leak, leak out, make tracks, run away, sling one's hook, take flight, take to one's heels, wriggle, wriggle out), escapar (break away, drive hard, elope, flee, get away, get off, let off, ride hard, run away, take flight). (various references) | |
Swedish | undkomma (elude, flee, outrun), rymma (abscond, accommodate, admit, carry, contain, desert, elope, flee, flit, hold, run away, seat, Stow, take), slippa (avoid, get rid of), rymning (desertion, elopement, get away, jail-break, prison breaking), flykt (flight, get away, get-away, movement). (various references) | |
Thai | การหนี (จากการถูกขัง). (various references) | |
Turkish | kaçak (absconder, contraband, deserter, escapee, fugitive, furtive, illegal, leak, leakage, on the lam, run, runaway, smuggled), atlatmak (beat smb. to it, bypass, circumvent, come through, dish, dodge, get over, give smb. the slip, jump, let down, outride, outwit, overcome, Parry, pull through, put off, shake, skip, slip, stall off, take, throw off, tide over, turn, ward off), dinlendirici şey, firar (absence without leave, break, breakout, desertion, flight, getaway, jailbreak, prison breaking), firar etmek (desert the colors, desert the colours, fly, run away, run off, take flight), gözünden kaçmak, hatırından çıkmak (forget), kaçış (bolt, flight, getaway, let out), aklına gelmemek (elude), kaçıp kurtulmak, sızmak (creep, effuse, emanate, exude, filter out, infiltrate, leak, leak out, ooze, ooze out, percolate, permeate, run, run out, seep, transpire, transude, trickle, weep), kaçak yapmak (leak, ooze out), kaçma (break, bunk, elopement, flight, getaway, lapse, scamper, scuttle), kaçmak (abscond, blow, bolt, break, break away, bunk, clear off, decamp, defect, desert, elope, fade, flee, fly, fly away, get away, go by, hook it, ladder, Lam, lapse, leg it, light out, make a bolt for it, make off, nip off, pack up, pull out, retreat, run, run away, run off, scamper away, scoot, scuttle, skip, skip it, skip out, slip, slip off, slope off, take flight, travel, walk off), kurtulma (avoidance, dodge, elusion, recovery, riddance, salvation), kurtulmak (be freed, be recovered from, be rid of, be saved, break away, break loose, break oneself of a habit, defecate, discard, disengage, dispose of, ditch, elude, evade, extricate oneself, free oneself, get away, get clear of, get out of, get rid of, make a bonfire of, make away with, pull through, put off, quit oneself, recover, shake off, smooth away, throw off), kurtuluş (deliverance, let out, liberation, out, release, salvation), paçayı sıyırmak (cut the gordian knot, have a narrow escape, live through, save one's bacon), sızıntı (creep, creepage, efflux, emanation, leak, leakage, ooze, outflow, runaway, seepage), kaçış yolu (escape hatch). (various references) | |
Turkmen | ylgaw (run, running), sypmak (get rid of, release), dyndarmak (get out of), alaз (exit). (various references) | |
Ukrainian | утекти (break out, bunk, evade, make away, mizzle, nip, pull it, run off, shank, whip away), врятуватися, втеча (bolt, bunk, decampment, escapade, escapement, get away, skedaddle), витікання (discharge, drain, effluence, emanation, issue, ooze, outflow, outlet), порятунок (refuge, salvage, saving). (various references) | |
Vietnamese | sự trốn thoát, phương tiện để trốn thoát, may mà thoát được, lối thoát sự thoát ly thực tế, con đường thoát. (various references) | |
Welsh | dihangfa, dianc (abscond, bolt). (various references) | |
Yucatec | puuts'ul (flee), luk'ul (absent onself, depart, flee, go away, leave, run away). (various references) | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various translation references. | ||
| Language | Period | Translations |
| Latin | 500 BCE-Modern | aberro, aufugit, effluant, effluere, effluerent, effugere, effugerent, effugeret, effugerunt, effugi, effugiant, effugiat, effugiemus, effugient, effugies, effugiet, effugio, effugio, effugi, effugiturus, effugisti, effugit, effugiunt, elabor, emergebant, emerserunt, evadat, evadens, evadere, evaderent, evadit, evaserat, evaserit, evaserunt, evasi, evasione, evasissemus, evasit, evolo, ex-, excidant, excidatis, excidebantur, exciderat, excideris, exciderit, exciderunt, excidisti, excidit, exciditur, exeam, exeamus, exeant, exeas, exeat, exeatis, exeunt, exeunte, exeuntem, exeuntes, exeunti, exeuntibus, exi, exibimus, exibis, exibit, exibitis, exibunt, exiebant, exiebat, exiens, exient, exientes, exierant, exieras, exierat, exierint, exieris, exierit, exieritis, exierunt, exies, exiet, exiit, exire, exirent, exires, exiret, exissent, exisset, existi, existis, exit, exite, exitu, exitum, exitus, exivi, exivit, fuga, fugam, fugio, ineffugibilem, pretereo, profugasti, profugerant, profugerit, profugi, profugit, refugerant, refugerunt, refugientes, refugisset, subterfugere, subterlabor, supereffluentem. (various references) |
| Old English | 450-1100 | losian. (various references) |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| Language | Date | Source | Matthew Chapter 23, Verse 33 |
| Greek (transliterated) | 250 BC | Septuagint | OfeiV gennhmata ecidnwn pwV fughte apo thV krisewV thV geennhV |
| Latin | 405 | Vulgate | Serpentes genimina viperarum quomodo fugietis a iudicio gehennae |
| Old English | 990 | West Saxon | Eale ge næddra & neddrena kyn. hwifleo ge fram helle dome. |
| Middle English | 1395 | Wyclif | Ye eddris, and eddris briddis, hou schulen ye fle fro the doom of helle? |
| Renaissance English | 1526 | Tyndale | Yee serpentes and generacion of vipers how shuld ye scape ye dapnacio of hell? |
| Jacobean English | 1611 | King James | Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell? |
| Victorian English | 1833 | Webster | Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell? |
| Basic English | 1964 | Ogden | You snakes, offspring of snakes, how will you be kept from the punishment of hell? |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Language | Matthew Chapter 23, Verse 33 |
| Cebuano | Kamong mga halas, kamong kaliwat sa mga bitin, unsaon ugod ninyo paghilingkawas gikan sa pagkahinukman ngadto sa infierno? |
| Croatian | "Zmije! Leglo gujinje! Kako æete uteæi osudi paklenoj? |
| Danish | I Slanger! I Øgleunger! hvorledes kunne I undfly Helvedes Dom? |
| Dutch | Gij slangen, gij adderengebroedsels! hoe zoudt gij de helse verdoemenis ontvlieden? |
| Finnish | Sentähden, katso, minä lähetän teidän tykönne profeettoja ja viisaita ja kirjanoppineita. Muutamat heistä te tapatte ja ristiinnaulitsette, ja toisia heistä te ruoskitte synagoogissanne ja vainoatte kaupungista kaupunkiin; |
| French | Serpents, race de vipères! comment échapperez-vous au châtiment de la géhenne? |
| German | Ihr Schlangen und Otterngezücht! wie wollt ihr der höllischen Verdammnis entrinnen? |
| Haitian Creole | Bann rize, bann vèmen! Kouman n'a fè chape anba chatiman lanfè a? |
| Indonesian-Bahasa Sehari-hari | Kalian jahat dan keturunan orang jahat! Bagaimana kalian bisa menyelamatkan diri dari hukuman di neraka? |
| Indonesian-Terjemahan Lama | Hai ular dan benih ular! Bagaimanakah dapat kamu lari melepaskan dirimu daripada hukuman neraka? |
| Italian | Serpenti, razza di vipere, come potrete scampare dalla condanna della Geenna? |
| Latvian | Jûs, èûsku un odþu izdzimums, kâ jûs izbçgsiet no elles sodîbas? |
| Manx Gaelic | Shiuish ard-nieughyn, sheeloghe dy ard-nieughyn, kys oddys shiu kerraghey niurin y scapail? |
| Maori | E nga neke, e te uri nakahi, me aha ka rere ai koutou i te kupu tuku ki te reinga? |
| Norwegian | I slanger! I ormeyngel! hvorledes kan I undfly helvedes dom? |
| Portuguese | Serpentes, raça de víboras! como escapareis da condenação do inferno? |
| Rumanian | Werpi, pui de nqpkrci! Cum veyi scqpa de pedeapsa gheenei? |
| Russian | ъНЙЙ, РПТПЦДЕОЙС ЕИЙДОЙОЩ! ЛБЛ ХВЕЦЙФЕ ЧЩ ПФ ПУХЦДЕОЙС Ч ЗЕЕООХ? |
| Shuar | `Napia ainiuitrume. Shuar aya yajauch awajniuitrume. Túmatirmesha Yus Tunáa shuaran jinium akupkartatna nuya ¿itiurak uwempratarum? |
| Swedish | I ormar, I huggormars avföda, huru skullen I kunna söka undgå att dömas till Gehenna? |
| Uma | "He topebagiu, he koi' to bengku' gau' -ni! Ha ni'uli' -koina tewi'iha-koi mpai' ngkai huku' -ni hi rala naraka-e? |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
Derivations | |
Words beginning with "escape": escaped, escapee, escapees, escapement, escapements, escaper, escapers, escapes. (additional references) | |
| |
"Escape" is suggested in spellcheckers for the following: ecae, ecca, eccup, Elsdale, esap, Esape, escale, escap, escapen, escapor, escope, Escp, Esdale, Eskapa, excape, rescape, scape, scappe, Secafe. (additional references) | |
| Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references). | |
| # of Phoneme Matches | Pronunciation | Word(s) rhyming with "escape" (pronounced uskā"p) |
| 4 | -s k ā" p | scape. |
| 3 | -k ā" p | Cape. |
Source: compiled by the editor (additional references); see credits. | ||
Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams | |
Direct Anagrams: peaces. | |
| Words within the letters "a-c-e-e-p-s" | |
-1 letter: capes, cease, cepes, paces, peace, pease, scape, space. | |
-2 letters: aces, apes, apse, cape, caps, case, cees, cepe, ceps, ease, pace, pacs, pase, peas, pecs, pees, seep, spae, spec. | |
-3 letters: ace, ape, asp, cap, cee, cep, pac, pas, pea, pec, pee, pes, sac, sae, sap, sea, sec, see, spa. | |
-4 letters: ae, as, es, pa, pe. | |
| Words containing the letters "a-c-e-e-p-s" | |
+1 letter: escaped, escapee, escaper, escapes, peaches, pectase, respace. | |
+2 letters: calipees, capelets, caperers, cheapens, cheapest, cheapies, cypselae, emplaces, escapade, escapees, escapers, escarped, especial, kneecaps, opalesce, peachers, peasecod, pectases, pectates, penances, percales, pleaches, preaches, prefaces, replaces, respaced, respaces, sapience, seapiece, seascape, spacemen, speciate, spectate, typecase. | |
+3 letters: acalephes, acceptees, accepters, aerospace, apotheces, becarpets, beclasped, callipees, camphenes, camporees, cheapness, conepates, copemates, creepages, earpieces, encapsule, enclasped, eparchies, escaloped, escapades, esperance, headspace, impeaches, opalesced, opalesces, palefaces, parceners, patencies, patiences, peaceniks, peachiest, peasecods, peccaries, peculates, pentacles, perfectas, placeboes, placeless, pleasance, praecipes, praefects, praelects, preachers, precleans, preclears, precrease, preenacts, prefacers, prelacies, preplaces, reaccepts, recarpets, reclasped, repatches, replacers, replicase, sapiences, scampered, scarpered, seapieces, seascapes, someplace, spaceless, spanceled, specialer, speciated, speciates, spectacle, spectated, spectates, speculate, superrace, sweepback, typecases, typefaces, uppercase, upreaches. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. | |
| 1. Definition 2. Synonyms 3. Crosswords 4. Usage: Modern | 5. Usage: Commercial 6. Images: Slideshow 7. Images: Photo Album 8. Images: Digital Art | 9. Quotations: Familiar 10. Quotations: Historic 11. Quotations: Fiction 12. Quotations: Non-fiction | 13. Quotations: Spoken 14. Quotations: Speeches 15. Usage Frequency 16. Expressions | 17. Expressions: Internet 18. Translations: Modern 19. Translations: Ancient 20. Bible Trace | 21. Abbreviations 22. Acronyms 23. Derivations 24. Rhymes | 25. Anagrams 26. Bibliography |
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