get a kick out of someone/something
get a kick out of (someone or something)
To get a sense of enjoyment, amusement, or excitement from someone or something. Even as an adult, I still get a kick out of building sandcastles at the beach. She really gets a kick out of doing wheelies on her motorcycle in front of an audience. I get a kick out of Janene—she's really hilarious.
See also: get, kick, of, out
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
get a kick out of someone/something
verbSee get a bang out of someone/something
See also: get, kick, of, out, someone, something
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
- get a kick out of (someone or something)
- get a kick out of something
- get a kick from (someone or something)
- get a kick from/out of something
- get a charge out of
- get a charge out of (something)
- get a charge out of something
- kick
- kick (oneself)
- kicks