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Phrase Means Longer Doctors Eslpod 0362 We 0399 Eslpod In Flight Service

Id ESLPod_0362_WE_0399
Episode Id ESLPod 362
Episode Title Getting In-Flight Service
Phrase out of
Text In this podcast, the phrase "out of" means no longer having something, or having given away or sold all of something so that nothing is left: "During the storms, all the stores ran out of flashlights and water." The phrase "out of" or "outside of" can also be used to talk about the distance away from a place: "They live in a beautiful small town just outside of Hackensack, New Jersey." Sometimes the phrase "out of" means not included in something: "Britney will be out of the choir until the doctors can cure her sore throat." Finally, the phrase "out of" can be used to mean that something or someone is no longer in a particular situation: "The doctors finally said that Mary Ann is out of danger and can go home from the hospital."
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