bring out of
bring (someone or something) out of (somewhere or someone)
1. To entice someone or something to emerge from a place or thing. I think this generous salary offer will bring Fred out of retirement. You can try using food to bring that scared cat out of hiding. Do you think there's anything we can do to bring Beth out of her funk?
2. To entice someone to say something, often something of a secretive nature. I even offered money in an attempt to bring that gossip out of her!
See also: bring, of, out
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
bring someone or something out of something
and bring someone or something outto cause someone or something to emerge from something or some place. The explosion brought the people out of their homes. The noise brought out all the people.
See also: bring, of, out
bring something out of someone
and bring something outto cause something to be said by a person, such as a story, the truth, an answer, etc. We threatened her a little and that brought the truth out of her. This warning ought to bring out the truth!
See also: bring, of, out
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
- bring (someone or something) out of (somewhere or someone)
- bring into action
- bring (someone or something) into action
- lure (someone or something) in(to something or some place)
- lure in to
- boggle at
- boggle at (something)
- dangle
- dangle (something) before (someone)
- dangle before