Idioms for ace
Origin of ace
1250–1300; 1915
for def 4; Middle English
as, aas < Old French
as < Latin: a unit; cf.
as2; sense 4 after French
as in World War I; sense 5 < 4
Words nearby ace
British Dictionary definitions for ace out (1 of 2)
ace
/ (eɪs) /
noun
adjective
informal
superb; excellent
verb (tr)
Word Origin for ace
C13: via Old French from Latin
as a unit, perhaps from a Greek variant of
heis one
British Dictionary definitions for ace out (2 of 2)
ACE
/ (eɪs) /
n acronym for
(in Britain) Advisory Centre for Education; a private organization offering advice on schools to parents
Allied Command Europe
angiotensin-converting enzyme
See ACE inhibitor
Idioms and Phrases with ace out (1 of 2)
ace out
Get the better of, defeat, as in Our team is bound to ace them out, or Those calculus problems aced me out again. [Slang; mid-1900s]
Take advantage of or cheat someone, as in John thought they were trying to ace him out of his promised promotion. [Slang; c. 1920]
Idioms and Phrases with ace out (2 of 2)
ace