A passage or gate from inside someplace to the outside, that permits escape or release.
Gimmick or ploy to escape a situation that is unfavorable, difficult or dangerous.
1We were now clear off, and making great way out to sea.
2Of course there's always one way out-thesure way-butthat can wait.
3However Kelly's character manages to inveigle her way out of the situation.
4There is not any clear way out of the sovereign debt crisis.
5A nineteenth-century amateur, did some work way out in New York State.
6It knows a way in, it must know a way out, yes.
7I see therefore no other way out therefore than resigning from GWPF.
8There may be no easy way out of this set of circumstances.
9Among Obama's czars, Holdren wasn't alone way out on the far left.
10Please, feel free to sign the guest book on your way out.'
11We are not going to arrest our way out of this problem.
12No way out, and plenty of warning in case someone came in.
13The company behind IBM's storage cloud is indeed on the way out.
14There are no streetlights way out on the parish roads, of course.
15I need your people all the way out of the picture immediately.
16He leads the way out of the church towards his private room.