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Discover LudwigThe phrase "cashed out" is a commonly used expression in written English.
It means to withdraw money from an account or investment. It can also refer to someone leaving a situation, such as a job or a game, with the intention of not returning. Example: "I sold all my stocks and cashed out my investments, hoping to make a profit before the market crashed." In this example, "cashed out" is used to indicate that the speaker withdrew their money from their investments. Another example: "I decided to cash out of the company and pursue my dream of starting my own business." Here, "cashed out" is used to convey that the person is leaving their current job and not planning on returning to it.
Dictionary
cashed out
verb
Past of cash out
Exact(60)
It cashed out, ultimately, in the Nobel Prize.
The other serial entrepreneurs usually cashed out before resigning.
They cashed out the extra equity from rising home prices.
(Dixon's team cashed out on Facebook's acquisition of Oculus Rift).
Some insiders cashed out early, but the long-term investors are nervous.
If he cashed out early, that loan would technically go into default.
Mr. Biglari cashed out when Friendly's was acquired by a private equity firm in 2007.
In hindsight, some Twitter shareholders who cashed out early have expressed regrets.
Ms Mellon cashed out of Jimmy Choo, worth £545m in 2011, for an estimated £85m.
He will be almost the only tycoon to have cashed out assets privatised in the 1990s.
But those with fewer shares were cashed out, at 82 cents a share.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com