From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishlive out phrasal verb1 LIVE SOMEWHERE British English if someone lives out, they do not live in the place where they work Most home helps prefer to live out.2 live out somethingEXPERIENCE to experience or do something that you have planned or hoped for SYN fulfil, realize The money enabled them to live out their dreams.3 live out your lifeLIFE to continue to live in a particular way or place until you die He lived out his life in solitude. → live→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
live out your life• Our comfort is this: We will live out our lives enchanted by Claire, her spell never broken.• There, side by side, Amelia and Mary Ann would live out their lives.• He began teaching philosophy at Harvard in 1882 and lived out his life as an eastern intellectual.• Egalitarian Rousseau lived out his life as the spoilt plaything of eccentric aristocrats.• John Morton lived out his life in Darvel, always respected by the people of the Irvine Valley.• She will find a way to live out her life without gangster Jackie.