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kick out

VERB
  1. remove from a position or office
    The chairman was ousted after he misappropriated funds
  2. force to leave or move out
    He was expelled from his native country

How To Use kick out In A Sentence

  • We just get a big kick out of seeing our names in the paper…that's what drives people like us into this business
  • He's not going to kick out social conservatives if they agree with these principles any more than he'll kick out social progressives if they agree with these principles.
  • I swear they get a kick out of it: `Oh, no, I'm afraid that doesn't go up to a EE ', they shout across to the cubicle. LOSING IT
  • Make no mistake - these guys know how to kick out the jams.
  • The German side win a free-kick outside the Chelsea box on the left flank, but the visitors clear.
  • As the farmer poured the fluid into the wounds they would bellow loudly and kick out at him.
  • Folks, sorry if my cheerleading is annoying you, but damn, I get such a kick out of well-written, fact supported and passionate posts like these! Think Progress » Cheney Led Effort To Smear Wilson, Played Dumb
  • I found Sheldon a couple of years ago, and get a kick out of the kid turned bazillionaire and those that gather around him. Sheldon Digs on Thor | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News
  • Always a couple of brutes insist upon impelling you sternwards; from whom the only means to release yourself is to kick out vigorously and unmercifully, when the Arabs will possibly retreat. Notes of a Journey From Cornhill to Grand Cairo
  • We have found too, that these younger patients have a great deal to contribute to our entire treatment programme through their energy and enthusiasm and that they get a kick out of doing so.
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