take somebody out to

  • 1take somebody out of himself/ herself — ˌtake sb ˈout of himself/ herself derived to make sb forget their worries and become less concerned with their own thoughts and situation Main entry: ↑takederived …

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  • 2take somebody out — …

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  • 3take it out on somebody — ˌtake it/sth ˈout on sb derived to behave in an unpleasant way towards sb because you feel angry, disappointed, etc, although it is not their fault • OK, so you had a bad day. Don t take it out on me. • She tended to take her frustrations out on… …

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  • 4take something out on somebody — ˌtake it/sth ˈout on sb derived to behave in an unpleasant way towards sb because you feel angry, disappointed, etc, although it is not their fault • OK, so you had a bad day. Don t take it out on me. • She tended to take her frustrations out on… …

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  • 5take something out against somebody — ˌtake sthˈout (against sb) derived to start legal action against sb by means of an official document • The police have taken out a summons against the driver of the car. Main entry: ↑takederived …

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  • 6Somebody Out There — Infobox Single Name = Somebody Out There Cover size = Caption = Artist = Kate Alexa from Album = Broken Beautiful Released = Start date|2006|9|4 Format = CD, digital download Recorded = Genre = Pop rock Length = 3:09 Label = Liberation Writer =… …

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  • 7take — take1 W1S1 [teık] v past tense took [tuk] past participle taken [ˈteıkən] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(action)¦ 2¦(move)¦ 3¦(remove)¦ 4¦(time/money/effort etc)¦ 5¦(accept)¦ 6¦(hold something)¦ 7¦(travel)¦ 8 …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 8fish somebody out (of something) — ˌfish sth/sbˈout (of sth) derived to take or pull sth/sb out of a place • She fished a piece of paper out of the pile on her desk. • They fished a dead body out of the river. Main entry: ↑fishderived …

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  • 9rule somebody out of something — ˌrule sb ˈout of sth derived usually passive (in sport) to state that a player, runner, etc. will not be able to take part in a sporting event; to prevent a player from taking part • He has been ruled out of the match with a knee injury.… …

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  • 10take out — verb 1. cause to leave (Freq. 7) The teacher took the children out of the classroom • Syn: ↑move out, ↑remove • Hyponyms: ↑clear, ↑call in, ↑estrange …

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