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Usenet Posted 22 years ago
Learning

"out of" means "because of"

I am surprised to find that "out of" has the meaning same as "because of". See the sentence:
They joined the orgnization out of interest.
It equals:
They joined the orgnization because of interest.
As "out of" also means "lacking of"(its ordinary meaning actually). So why does it mean "because of"? And how could I distinguish them?

TIA.
With best regards
  

Top answer

[nq:1]I am surprised to find that "out of" has the meaning same as "because of". See the sentence: They joined ... also means "lacking of"(its ordinary meaning actually).

  • [nq:1]I am surprised to find that "out of" has the meaning same as "because of".
  • See the sentence: They joined ...
  • also means "lacking of"(its ordinary meaning actually).
  • So why does it mean "because of"?
  • [/nq] There are some English words that have many meanings, and you can only discover which meaning is intended from context.
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6 Answers
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[nq:1]I am surprised to find that "out of" has the meaning same as "because of". See the sentence: They joined ... also means "lacking of"(its ordinary meaning actually). So why does it mean "because of"? And how could I distinguish them?[/nq]
There are some English words that have many meanings, and you can only discover which meaning is intended from context. My dictionary for instance lists
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[nq:1]I am surprised to find that "out of" has the meaning same as "because of". See the sentence: They joined the orgnization out of interest. It equals: They joined the orgnization because of interest.[/nq]
That's about right - "because they were interested" is better, because it tells us whose was was the interest.
[nq:1]As "out of" also means "lacking of"(its ordinary meaning actually)
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[nq:1]There are some English words that have many meanings, and you can only discover which meaning is intended from context. My dictionary for instance lists no less than 76 meanings for the word "out". [/nq]
IANL (I am not a lexicographer) but I doubt whether even 76 "meanings" is exhaustive. As I've written in a parallel post, I think trying to define the common prepositions is futile. Ther
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[nq:1]Subject: Re: "out of" means "because of" From: John Ings It sometimes amazes me that I have in the course ... and have no problem with them. I can certainly see why it would bewilder and confuse folks learning the language.[/nq]
I didn't start speaking English until my early teens and I think "out of" is not that difficult to figure out. When something comes "out of" something it means i
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[nq:2]It sometimes amazes me that I have in the course ... why it would bewilder and confuse folks learning the language.[/nq]
[nq:1]I didn't start speaking English until my early teens and I think "out of" is not that difficult to figure out.[/nq]
I was referring to words like 'out'. For instance "figure out".
[nq:1]When something comes "out of" something it means it originates from s
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[nq:1]I am surprised to find that "out of" has the meaning same as "because of". See the sentence: They joined ... also means "lacking of"(its ordinary meaning actually). So why does it mean "because of"? And how could I distinguish them?[/nq]
As somebody else pointed out, "They joined the orgnization because of interest." is not a good sentence so "out of" cannot be simply replaced by "becaus

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