flip out
flip out
1. slang To suddenly express anger or excitement in a very visible way. Mom will flip out when she finds out we broke her vase! When Jenny saw that we'd rented a pony for her birthday party, she totally flipped out.
2. slang To become emotionally unstable or unmoored. I think I flipped out a bit after college because I had no direction in my life. After the divorce, Pete flipped out and started getting into some weird stuff.
3. slang To cause someone to have an extreme emotional reaction, whether positive or negative. In this usage, a noun or pronoun can be used between "flip" and "out." If we rent a pony for Jenny's birthday party, it will totally flip her out. No way, man—haunted houses really flip me out.
See also: flip, out
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
flip out
Sl. to lose control of oneself. After a sleepless night, Wally simply flipped out. I felt like I was going to flip out from the steady dripping of the faucet.
See also: flip, out
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
flip out
v. Slang
1. To go crazy: The neighbors flipped out when my oak tree crashed onto their property.
2. To react strongly and especially enthusiastically; flip: When the broker showed me the spacious new apartment, I flipped out. The customer flipped out over the luxurious black convertible.
See also: flip, out
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Phrasal Verbs.
flip (out)
in. to lose control of oneself; to go crazy. Wow, I almost flipped out when I heard about it.
See also: flip, out
flip someone out
verbSee flip someone off
See also: flip, out, someone
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
- flip someone out
- freak out
- phreak
- freak out, to
- freak someone out
- freaked
- freaked out
- freaking
- freak out over (something)
- give (one) a thick ear