Trap; especially in an error or in a reprehensible act.
1 It can catch out European horses -our stayers can get lost.
2 Alongside the road, women were selling their families' catch out of large coolers.
3 It's quite a surprise and seems to catch out every now and again.
4 I didn't feel like a suspect, someone he was trying to catch out .
5 While many items are not illegal, CITES aims to catch out the illegal trades.
6 The Transport Agency has rushed in more powers to catch out dodgy seatbelt repairs.
7 Unfortunately for Palace Yannick Bolasie's element of surprise did not often catch out his opponents.
8 Then everybody goes in with their hands and throws the catch out on the sand.
9 She wasn't as easy to catch out as that.
10 Reporters love to catch out politicians on a lie.
11 Automated phone calls are one of the most cost-effective ways scammers can catch out unsuspecting Australians.
12 You need to get up early in the morning to catch out Minister for Finance Michael Noonan.
13 For a while she just sat still and tried to get the catch out of her breathing.
14 But they would rather companies come clean on goodwill impairments that continue to catch out less savvy shareholders.
15 He was doing... something incredibly inconspicuous that we could barely catch out of the far corners of our eyes.
16 Watch: Manuel Neuer horribly caught out of position as South Korea score
Other examples for "catch out"
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This collocation consists of: Translations for catch out