The hell out of Meaning in English
expression
ˈðə/, /ðə/, /ði/ /ˈhɛɫ/ /ˈaʊt/ /ˈəv
thuh-HELL-owt-uv
ðə, ði/ /hˈɛl/ /ˈaʊt/ /ˈɒv
thuh-HELL-owt-ov
परिभाषा
An informal and emphatic way to mean 'a lot,' 'very strongly,' or 'intensely.' Used to add strong emphasis, often in expressions like 'scared the hell out of me' or 'beat the hell out of.'
उपयोग और बारीकियां
Extremely informal and emphatic, sometimes slightly rude. Only use in casual speech, not in formal writing or polite contexts. Commonly follows verbs (e.g., 'scare', 'beat', 'enjoy'), always for strong emphasis.
Spanish: con todas tus fuerzas - muchísimo - de verdadPortuguese (BR): pra caramba - pra valer - com tudoPortuguese (PT): com força - imenso - à grandeChinese (Simplified): 狠狠地 - 非常 - 极其Chinese (Traditional): 狠狠地 - 非常 - 極其Hindi: ज़बरदस्त तरीके से - बहुत ज़्यादाArabic: بكل قوة - إلى أبعد حد - بشدةBengali: জবরদস্তভাবে - প্রচণ্ডভাবে - খুব বেশিRussian: до чертиков - чертовски сильно - до чёртаJapanese: めちゃくちゃ - 死ぬほど - とことんVietnamese: quá trời - cực kỳ - kinh khủngKorean: 엄청나게 - 죽을 만큼 - 미친 듯이Turkish: delicesine - fena halde - aşırı derecedeUrdu: بے تحاشا - بہت زیادہ - حد سے زیادہIndonesian: habis-habisan - sekuat-kuatnya - sangat-sangat
उदाहरण वाक्य
That movie scared the hell out of me.
basic
He enjoyed the hell out of that meal.
basic
They beat the hell out of the old drums.
basic
She yelled the hell out of my name across the street.
natural
I worked the hell out of those problems last night.
natural
You need to relax—you’re stressing the hell out of yourself.
natural