From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishkick somebody ↔ out phrasal verbLEAVE A JOB OR ORGANIZATIONLEAVE A SCHOOL OR COLLEGEto make someone leave a place, job etc SYN throw out Bernard’s wife kicked him out. of He was kicked out of the golf club. → kick→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
kick out• But I had my own place then and I could kick him out.• He said, I kicked them out.• Otherwise, you may discreetly kick him out.• But two years later, it secretly decided to upgrade the base and kicked the city out in 1953.• I still haven't figured out how Roy Evans managed to kick Fat Pat out of her own house.• Clayt kicked it out of sight into the stern of the boat.• They kicked him out of the Soviet Union two years ago.• A free kick 25 yards out perfectly placed and left the Derby defence bemused and helpless.kick of• All they know is, they can kick these cases out of court.• I still haven't figured out how Roy Evans managed to kick Fat Pat out of her own house.• Clayt kicked it out of sight into the stern of the boat.• Giuliani demanded that the State Department kick both diplomats out of the country.• Many times her parents had carried her kicking and screaming out of the grocery store or the local department store.• She kicked Blue Dove out of the office, too.• They kicked him out of the Soviet Union two years ago.• It kicks them out of their jobs.From Longman Business Dictionarykick somebody → out phrasal verb [transitive] informal to dismiss someone from a job or make them leave a group ofSome of his fellow attorneys tried to kick him out of the profession. → kick→ See Verb table