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help out

VERB
  1. be of help, as in a particular situation of need
    Can you help out tonight with the dinner guests?

How To Use help out In A Sentence

  • Jim had hustled over quietly and begun to help out with the horseshoeing, expecting ridicule from the likes of Hugh Glass or old Zeke Williams, who had just arrived at the rendezvous, but, to his surprise, the fact that he was married to a woman of such pure fire produced the very opposite of the effect he had feared. The Berrybender Narratives
  • But he does pop in now and again and has also enlisted his celeb chef pals to help out at various times during the year. The Sun
  • Races, which was written by a number of MGM contract writers including George Seaton (who later went on to write and direct Miracle on 34th Street), seems to me to soften the Brothers up quite a bit more; Groucho's less of a * schnorrer*, Chico has a real job (working at the sanitarium), as does Harpo (a jockey?!), and their goals are even nobler: they don't just want to help out young lovers, they want to save a failing sanitarium from the evil businessman. I Had that Same Horse When I Had My Eyes Examined
  • Doctors, personal trainers and nutritionists are on call to help out. Times, Sunday Times
  • So instead I ask the straight girls amongst you to help out the naïve and cack-handed man in your life.
  • I tried to help out, trying to not seem all that selfish and let him do the work and all, but alas, he insisted on me just sitting on my lazy bum and watch him.
  • Some broadcast stations even employ cameramen or producers to help out on the shows.
  • It can be very demoralising for the people who do help out to have their efforts unappreciated.
  • He visits his old office, tries to help out, but feels like he left the work in inept hands.
  • My good friend Dave, formerly the Glaswegian Miserablist, tries to help out. "Come join me at Ibrox, the home of fair-play and sportsmanship.
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