See also: chillout and chill-out

English

edit

Etymology

edit

From chill and out.

Pronunciation

edit

Verb

edit

chill out (third-person singular simple present chills out, present participle chilling out, simple past and past participle chilled out)

  1. (intransitive, slang) To relax or take time out; to calm down; reduce or go easy on something.
    Synonym: chill
    Since I'm between projects, I think I'll just chill out.
    I wish I could chill out about the neighbor's barking dog, but it wakes me up every night.
    You should chill out on the fatty foods.
    • 2002 April 23, Avril Lavigne, Lauren Christy, Graham Edwards, Scott Spock (lyrics and music), “Complicated”, in Let Go, performed by Avril Lavigne, Arista Records:
      Chill out, whatcha yelling for?
    • 2004, Simon Pegg, Edgar Wright, Shaun of the Dead (motion picture):
      Ed: Chill out. Everyone's all right. / Shaun: Stop telling me to chill out!
    • 2004 January 2, Ariel Levy, “Where the Bois Are”, in New York Magazine[1]:
      A girl [] telling her friend, “I met her at a party three weeks ago, but now she’s like e-mailing me and I’m just like, chill out, bitch!”
  2. (intransitive, slang, somewhat dated) To hang out; spend time together with another person or group.
    Synonyms: chill, hang out
    Hey, we should chill out together this weekend.
edit

Translations

edit

See also

edit

Noun

edit

chill out (plural chill outs)

  1. Alternative spelling of chillout