0 past simple and past participle of thrash
1 to hit a person or animal hard many times as a punishment:
2 to move from side to side in a violent or uncontrolled way:
3 to defeat someone very easily in a game or sports competition:
4 to thresh
They had thrashed out all the implications of materials and construction and had understood in detail how it would be made.
You know anything could be thrashed out which is what you need (5t).
Again this is a question which needs to be thrashed out.
Yet this impassioned shuffle required that modern architecture be made whole and, if that unity was not forthcoming, that one be forged before it could be demonised and ultimately thrashed.
No, there cannot be temporary expedients indefinitely, but a matter of policy should be thrashed out properly before a decision is made.
All these complicated questions must be thrashed out upstairs.
They should be thrashed out in committee so that we have a smooth vote in plenary.
The crop there is matured as it ripens; it can be harvested and thrashed in one operation.