Unit 2 In the Evening
Go out to leave home to do an activity (usually in the evening)
▪ Marco went out with his friends very often until he got married.
▪ Mr. and Mrs. Faulk go out for a walk almost every evening.
Stay out to remain away from home at night
Opposite meaning: stay in (to stay at home)
▪ On New Year’s Eve many people stay out late at night.
▪ There was such a bad storm last night that we decided to stay in instead of going out.
Stay up to remain awake at night
Related idiom: wait up
USAGE NOTE: Wait up is often used when somone has to wait for another person, such as a child, to come home at night. Stay up can be used for this purpose, but it also has a more general meaning.
▪ Lisa was too tired to stay up for the late-night movie that she had planned to see.
▪ I can’t believe that my parents are going to wait up until I get home tonight.
Be tired out to be completely tired (usually at the end of the day)
Also: be tuckered out
USAGE NOTE: Be tuckered out is more informal than be tired out.
▪ I’m sorry that I’m too tired out to attend the lecture with you tonight.
▪ After a hard day’s work in the yard, Mr. Coulson said, “I’m tuckered out!”
Fall asleep to begin sleeping
Also: drop off to sleep, doze off
▪ Terence fell asleep on the couch while watching a boring movie on TV.
▪ I like to read in the evening until I drop off to sleep around 10:00 P.M.
▪ One person in the theater audience started snoring after he dozed off.
Turn in to retire, to enter one’s bed
Also: go to sleep, go to bed
▪ The Fares always turn in after watching the eleven o’clock news.
▪ When do you generally go to sleep at night?
▪ Nancy was so tired that she couldn’t wait to go to bed.
Hit the sack to sleep
Also: hit the hay, crash out
USAGE NOTE: These idioms are more informal than turn in, go to sleep, and go to bed.
▪ I’m so tired that the only thing I want to do is take a shower and hit the sack.
▪ Arnold stumbled into the house at midnight and said, “Time to hit the hay!”
▪ Carla didn’t mind crashing out in her friend’s living room during her visit.
Bed down to prepare a temporary place to sleep
USAGE NOTE: This idiom is usually used for sleeping outdoors in a temporary location.
▪ The hikers bedded down in a different place each night of their weeklong trip.
▪ The soldiers were told to bed down in the barn of an old farmhouse.
After hours after the normal, or permitted, time
USAGE NOTE: After hours can be used as an adjecrive when it is hyphenated (-).
▪ Most large cities have a part of town where people can go after hours.
▪ The popular nightclub stayed open for a special after-hours party.
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