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The phrase "arse out" is not standard in written English and may be considered informal or vulgar.
It can be used in casual conversation or informal writing, often to describe a situation where someone is caught off guard or in trouble.
Example: "He really had his arse out when he forgot the meeting was today."
Alternatives: "caught off guard" or "in a bind".
Exact(19)
"I walked home the other day and a group of young boys shouted at me to get my arse out and my tits out," said Emma. "It was daytime, it would have been about 3pm and they were about 14.
Balancing your phone tentatively on the radiator, you try to stick your arse out, but you lean out so far your belly is protruding more than your butt cheeks.
Get your arse out here now.
Or one of them gets his arse out.
I caned the arse out of it and left no stone unturned.
But listen, I fucking ripped the arse out of it for many, many years, you know.
Similar(41)
For decades we have reigned unbeaten, whether we're three-pingers deep in Ibiza, upsetting the locals in Magaluf, or just waltzing around rainy town centers with our arses out and traffic cones on our heads.
For decades we have reigned unbeaten, whether three pingers deep in Ibiza, upsetting the locals in Magaluf, or just waltzing round rainy town centres with our arses out and traffic cones on our heads, we are surely the international premier pissheads.
For all our much-touted faux-tolerance that kind of undisguised, unbridled, bare-faced, arse-out-for-the-photographer mindlessness wasn't permissible in puritanical Middle England.
"Le Saux takes it up the arse" rang out from the terraces for 15 years.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with wearing leather chaps and having your arse hanging out, but we are not all camp.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com