Origin of escape

1250–1300; Middle English escapen, ascapen < Old North French escaper (French échapper) < Vulgar Latin *excappāre, verbal derivative (with ex- ex-1) of Late Latin cappa hooded cloak (see cap1)

synonym study for escape

7. Escape, elude, evade mean to keep free of something. To escape is to succeed in keeping away from danger, pursuit, observation, etc.: to escape punishment. To elude implies baffling pursuers or slipping through an apparently tight net: The fox eluded the hounds. To evade is to turn aside from or go out of reach of a person or thing: to evade the police. See also avoid.

OTHER WORDS FROM escape

Example sentences from the Web for escapable

  • They are the most escapable things we have ever tried to keep.

    Pond and Stream |Arthur Ransome
  • On a craft like this every man instinctively knows what should be done in any moment of escapable peril.

British Dictionary definitions for escapable

escape
/ (ɪˈskeɪp) /

verb

noun

Derived forms of escape

escapable, adjective escaper, noun

Word Origin for escape

C14: from Old Northern French escaper, from Vulgar Latin excappāre (unattested) to escape (literally: to remove one's cloak, hence free oneself), from ex- 1 + Late Latin cappa cloak

Medical definitions for escapable

escape
[ ĭ-skāp ]

n.

A gradual effusion from an enclosure; a leakage.
A cardiological situation in which one pacemaker defaults or an atrioventricular conduction fails, and another pacemaker sets the heart's pace for one or more beats.

Idioms and Phrases with escapable

escape