"Salida" is the Spanish word for exit.
: to go out or away : depart.
exit (plural exits) An act of going out or going away, or leaving; a departure. quotations ▼synonyms, antonyms ▲ Synonyms: egress, outgoing Antonyms: entrance, entry, ingoing, ingress. He made his exit at the opportune time. (specifically, drama) The action of an actor leaving a scene or the stage.
the act of leaving a place, especially a theatre stage: He saw Emma arrive and made a quick exit. She made her exit from the stage to rapturous applause. the act of leaving something such as a job, an organization, a competition, or a television show: They believed his exit from the Department of Education was likely.
Common types of exit strategies include a strategic acquisition, initial public offerings (IPO), management buyouts, and selling to someone you know. Other examples of exit plans are mergers, liquidation, or filing for bankruptcy.
This can be a hallway, passageway, or access door. The exit is the portion between the exit access and the exit discharge. Examples of exits are exterior exit doors, interior egress stairs, ramps, exterior fire escape stairs, and horizontal exits.
Exit, Exeunt Basic meaning: to depart the acting area and disappear through a stage door. Exits were moves which had a certain duration – that is, moves to be begun, continued, and completed.
move out of or depart from. synonyms: get out, go out, leave go away, go forth, leave. go away from a place. Antonyms: come in, enter, get in, get into, go in, go into, move into.
There are four main types of exit strategies businesses use to sell or dispose of their assets: initial public offering (IPO), mergers and acquisitions (M&A), private equity investment and private investment in public equity (PIPE).
Parting is such sweet sorrow, That I shall say good night till it be morrow. My necessaries are embark'd: farewell. Adieu! I have too grieved a heart to take a tedious leave.
Perhaps one of the most famous, or infamous of Shakespeare's stage directions, 'Exit, pursued by a bear' in Act III of The Winter's Tale, sees Antigonus meet death in the most unlikely of ways: at the hands – or rather the claws – of a bear.
SIGNIFICANCE OF THE TITLE
Exit, Pursued by a Bear is loosely based on Shakespeare's A Winter's Tale. The title refers to Shakespeare's stage directions just before the death of Antigonus (who is eaten by a bear). Some of the characters in Exit clearly represent characters in A Winter's Tale.
1 exit /ˈɛgzət/ /ˈɛksət/ noun. plural exits.
If you read plays, you might see the stage direction, “exeunt.” Exeunt is Latin for “they go out.” The difference between this and the familiar “exit” is numbers. Exit refers to the direction when one person leaves the stage and exeunt is the direction given when two or more performers leave the stage.
Finally, there is "the resolution, also known as the denouement", which is the end of the play, where everything comes together and the situation has been resolved, leaving the audience satisfied with the play as a whole.
Exit route means a continuous and unobstructed path of exit travel from any point within a workplace to a place of safety (including refuge areas). An exit route consists of three parts: The exit access; the exit; and, the exit discharge. (An exit route includes all vertical and horizontal areas along the route.)
[intransitive, transitive] (formal) to go out; to leave a building, stage, vehicle, etc. (+ adv./prep.) The bullet entered her back and exited through her chest.
noun. a way or passage out: Please leave the theater by the nearest exit. any of the marked ramps or spurs providing egress from a highway: Take the second exit after the bridge for the downtown shopping district.
optimistic Add to list Share.