aside
a·side / əˈsīd/ • adv. to one side; out of the way: he pushed his plate aside they stood aside to let a car pass. ∎ in reserve; for future use: she set aside some money for rent. ∎ used to indicate that one is dismissing something from consideration, or that one is shifting from one topic or tone of discussion to another: joking aside, I've certainly had my fill.• n. 1. a remark or passage by a character in a play that is intended to be heard by the audience but unheard by the other characters in the play. ∎ a remark not intended to be heard by everyone present: “Does that make him a murderer?” whispered Alice in an aside to Fred.2. a remark that is not directly related to the main topic of discussion: the recipe book has little asides about the importance of home and family.PHRASES: aside from apart from.set something aside1. annul a legal decision or process.2. put in reserve: he was setting aside a few dollars a week.take (or draw) someone aside move someone away from a group of people in order to talk privately.