bring someone out of their shell — bring (someone) out of (their) shell come out of (your) shell to become less shy and more friendly. Joining the drama group has brought Ian out of his shell … New idioms dictionary
bring someone out of shell — bring (someone) out of (their) shell come out of (your) shell to become less shy and more friendly. Joining the drama group has brought Ian out of his shell … New idioms dictionary
bring someone out — encourage someone to feel more confident. → bring … English new terms dictionary
bring someone to justice — mainly journalism phrase to make someone have a trial in order to find out whether they are guilty of a crime The girl’s killers have never been brought to justice. Thesaurus: court cases and legal processeshyponym Main entry: justice * * *… … Useful english dictionary
ˌbring sth ˈout — phrasal verb 1) to produce a new product and start to sell it Syn: release They have recently brought out a new CD.[/ex] 2) to make a particular quality appear in someone or something Tragedies like this sometimes bring out the best in people (=… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
bring someone to justice — mainly journalism to make someone have a trial in order to find out whether they are guilty of a crime The girl s killers have never been brought to justice … English dictionary
take (someone) out (somewhere) — to bring someone somewhere for food or entertainment. When the dictionary was finished, our boss took us out for dinner. Alex is taking her out to a concert … New idioms dictionary
bring out of their shell — bring (someone) out of (their) shell come out of (your) shell to become less shy and more friendly. Joining the drama group has brought Ian out of his shell … New idioms dictionary
bring out of shell — bring (someone) out of (their) shell come out of (your) shell to become less shy and more friendly. Joining the drama group has brought Ian out of his shell … New idioms dictionary
throw someone out — EXPEL, eject, evict, drive out, force out, oust, remove; get rid of, depose, topple, unseat, overthrow, bring down, overturn, dislodge, displace, supplant, show someone the door … Useful english dictionary