dropout
English
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editEtymology
editPronunciation
editAudio (Southern England): (file) - Hyphenation: drop‧out
Noun
editdropout (countable and uncountable, plural dropouts)
- Someone who has left an educational institution without completing the course
- The politicians of the world are mere political university dropouts.
- Someone who has opted out of conventional society.
- One who suddenly leaves anything, or the act of doing so.
- 1980 August 30, David Rothenberg, “A New York State of Confusion”, in Gay Community News, volume 8, number 6, page 5:
- The pastures are filled with gay political drop-outs, persons of reasonable intent who found the scene personally destructive.
- 2010, R. Barker Bausell, Too Simple to Fail: A Case for Educational Change, page 193:
- To avoid excessive dropouts from the study, we wouldn't employ a single tutored group and a single control group that received no instruction at all.
- (cycling) The slot in the frame that accepts the axles of the wheels.
- A damaged portion of a tape or disk, causing a brief omission of audio, video, or data.
- Momentary loss of an electronic signal.
- A technique for regularizing a neural network by discarding a random subset of its units.
Derived terms
editTranslations
editone who leaves without completing
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someone who has opted out of conventional society
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slot in a bicycle frame to hold the axle of a wheel