News0 min ago
Lucked out
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It's quite an American phrase, but how can 'lucked out' be good luck? Wouldn't you be out of luck? In NZ it is bad luck. What are your thoughts?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.To 'luck out' has been an American saying since the 1950s, meaning to be luckily successful in a dangerous or difficult situation. I suspect the 'out', for them, suggests the 'escape element'...ie the getting away from the danger...rather than the 'absence element' that most other English speakers think of. We see that in phrases such as 'his luck ran out'.
We also use the phrase "his luck ran out" to mean the same thing as people in the UK do. I think QM is right about the danger aspect in "lucked out." When I say it, I usually mean an implication that the situation could have been really bad, but it ended up being good. As in, "I almost got in a car accident, but lucked out since I slammed on the brakes in time." (Ok, that's an extreme example of a phrase that is used all the time, but it's a good demonstration). So, I got lucky and escaped a potentially bad situation.