beat+out-and-out

  • 81Out of Season (album) — Out of Season Studio album by Beth Gibbons and Rustin Man Released 28 October 2002 Ge …

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  • 82beat (the) hell out of somebody — beat/kick (the) ˈhell out of sb/sth | knock ˈhell out of sb/sth idiom (informal) to hit sb/sth very hard • He was a dirty player and loved to kick hell out of the opposition. Main entry: ↑hellidiom …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 83beat (the) hell out of something — beat/kick (the) ˈhell out of sb/sth | knock ˈhell out of sb/sth idiom (informal) to hit sb/sth very hard • He was a dirty player and loved to kick hell out of the opposition. Main entry: ↑hellidiom …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 84Beat (band) — Beat were a Finnish band who represented their country in Eurovision Song Contest 1990. The group performed the song Fri? (Free?) in Swedish and finished 21st out of 22 countries, scoring 8 points. The group was composed of members Tina Engblom,… …

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  • 85Out of Control (Praga Khan song) — Out of Control Single by Praga Khan Released 1990 Format Vinyl, 12 , 45 RPM Recorded 1989 …

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  • 86Out in the Fields — Out in the Fields: The Very Best of Gary Moore …

    Википедия

  • 87beat your brains out — beat (your) brains out to spend a lot of time worrying about a problem and thinking about how to deal with it. I ve been beating my brains out trying to think of a way of getting the money to her in time. (often + doing something) …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 88beat brains out — beat (your) brains out to spend a lot of time worrying about a problem and thinking about how to deal with it. I ve been beating my brains out trying to think of a way of getting the money to her in time. (often + doing something) …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 89beat the daylights out of someone — If someone beats the daylights out of another person, they hit them repeatedly. ( Knock can also be used and it can be made even stronger by saying the living daylights .) …

    The small dictionary of idiomes

  • 90Beat the Band — was a musical quiz show heard on NBC radio from 1940 to 1944 in two distinctly different series. The program popularized the show business catch phrase, Give me a little traveling music, often uttered on TV a decade later by Jackie Gleason. In… …

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