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kick out
verb
- informal.to eject or dismiss
- basketball (of a player who has dribbled towards the basket) to pass the ball to a player further away from the basket
noun
- basketball an instance of kicking out the ball
- (in Gaelic football) a free kick to restart play after a goal or after the ball has gone out of play
Example Sentences
After a fan was kicked out after saying something to annoy Dimitrov, the Bulgarian made a slow start to the second set.
"He's not kicked out of F1," Marko said, "and Racing Bulls will give him the chance to recover and his career will start again."
And it isn’t clear whether the threat of dismissal actually convinces parents to get vaccinated, or whether patients who get kicked out of a practice end up finding other sources of care.
“I know these kids probably got a kick out of being on the field we practice on,†said Stafford, who attended the event with his wife Kelly and four daughters.
The army appears poised to regain control of the capital two years after it was kicked out by its paramilitary rivals, known as the RSF.
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