chute noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes | Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com

Definition of chute noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

chute

noun
 
/ʃuːt/
 
/ʃuːt/
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  1. a tube or passage down which people or things can slide
    • a water chute (= at a swimming pool)
    • a laundry/rubbish/garbage chute (= from the upper floors of a high building)
    Homophones chute | shootchute   shoot
     
    /ʃuːt/
     
    /ʃuːt/
    • chute noun
      • The laundry chute leads down to the washer-dryer area in the basement.
    • shoot verb
      • The recruits are learning to shoot at targets.
    • shoot noun
      • She posed for the cameras as though for a fashion shoot.
    Extra Examples
    • He tossed the discarded wrapping down the chute.
    • The rubbish goes down the chute into a large bin.
    • a swimming pool with a long water chute
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • garbage
    • laundry
    • rubbish
    preposition
    • down a/​the chute
    See full entry
  2. (informal) a parachute (= a device that is attached to people or objects to make them fall slowly and safely when they are dropped from an aircraft. It consists of a large piece of thin cloth that opens out in the air.)
  3. Word Originsense 1 early 19th cent. (originally a North American usage): from French, ‘fall’ (of water or rocks), from Old French cheoite, feminine past participle of cheoir ‘to fall’, from Latin cadere; influenced by shoot.sense 2 1920s: shortened form.
See chute in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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