What is another word for into the street?

Pronunciation: [ˌɪntʊ ðə stɹˈiːt] (IPA)

There are a number of synonyms for the phrase "into the street," each with its own connotation and nuance. "Onto the pavement" suggests a gradual, deliberate emergence, while "out of doors" implies a sense of getting away from something confining or oppressive. "Out in the open" suggests a bold and unapologetic movement, while "off the sidewalk" has a slightly playful or irreverent tone. "Into the public thoroughfare" is a more formal and elegant alternative, while "amidst the hustle and bustle" implies a sense of energy and activity. Ultimately, the synonym chosen will depend on the context and tone of the writing, and the exact meaning desired.

Synonyms for Into the street:

  • Other relevant words:

    out of doors

What are the hypernyms for Into the street?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    departure, leave room, go outside.

Famous quotes with Into the street

  • What I'm fighting for now in my work... for an expression relevant to all manner of blacks, poems I could take into a tavern, into the street, into the halls of a housing project.
    Gwendolyn Brooks
  • Jackson, pistols drawn, lurched into the street vowing to shoot the ass off Jesus Christ, the longlegged white son of a bitch.
    Cormac McCarthy
  • He [Welles] was an onlooker at the clumsy, poignant suicide of "The Man on the Ledge," which took place in New York in 1938, when a boy perched for fourteen hours on a window-sill of the Gotham Hotel before plunging into the street. "I stood in the crowd outside for a long time," Welles says pensively, "and wanted to make a film of it all. But they tell me that in the Hollywood version of the film they gave the boy a for what he did. That's crazy. It's the crowd that needs explaining."
    Orson Welles
  • The fate of the country does not depend on how you vote at the polls — the worst man is as strong as the best at that game; it does not depend on what kind of paper you drop into the ballot-box once a year, but on what kind of man you drop from your chamber into the street every morning.
    Henry David Thoreau
  • The opera-glasses she stole from the bookcase so that each morning she could look through them down into the street in order to make people bigger and bring them close to her in order to feel less lonely. (p. 263)
    Stig Dagerman

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