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English

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Pronunciation

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Prepositional phrase

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out of house and home

  1. (idiomatic) In a manner that deprives someone of a dwelling place or some usage thereof.
    • 1999 May 31, “Pile Drivers Move Residents Out of House and Home”, in The Press, Christchurch:
    • 2002, Gail White, “Partying with the Intelligentsia”, in Gail White: Greatest Hits 1981-2001, →ISBN, page 15:
      Poets will drink you out of house and home
      leaving your living room in disarray
    • c. 2005, “Helping Your Dog Adjust to a New Home”, in The Progressive Animal Welfare Society, retrieved 16 April 2015:
      The other major reason [to puppy-proof] is to keep you from being chewed out of house and home.
    • c. 2005, “Global Checkup: How Healthy is Earth?”, in Science NOW:
      Many amphibians are being heated out of house and home.
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