show/see to the door
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show someone the door, show someone to the door — show (someone) the door, show (someone) to the door see ↑door • • • Main Entry: ↑show … Useful english dictionary
show/see someone to the door — show/see (someone) to the door : to go to the door with (someone who is leaving) My secretary will show you to the door. [=show you out] • • • Main Entry: ↑door … Useful english dictionary
show the door, show to the door — show (someone) the door, show (someone) to the door see ↑door • • • Main Entry: ↑show … Useful english dictionary
show someone the door — To turn someone out of the house • • • Main Entry: ↑door * * * show someone the door informal phrase to tell someone to leave, especially in a rude or angry way When he asked for money, she showed him the door. Thesaurus: to force someone to… … Useful english dictionary
The Door into Summer — First Edition cover … Wikipedia
door — W1S1 [do: US do:r] n [: Old English; Origin: duru door and dor gate ] 1.) the large flat piece of wood, glass etc that you open and close when you go into or out of a building, room, vehicle etc, or when you open a cupboard →↑gate open/close/shut … Dictionary of contemporary English
The Saturdays — outside the Rovers Return Inn on the set of Coronation Street. From left: Mollie King, Una Healy, Rochelle Wiseman, Frankie Sandford and Vanessa White Background information … Wikipedia
Through the Door — Doctorwhobox serial name=47 48 Through the Door writer=David Wise series= Series 1 length=2 episodes date=November 18 19, 1986 preceding=The Revolt of Paradise Estate following=The Quest of the Princess Ponies| Through The Door is the sixteenth… … Wikipedia
get your foot in the door — get your foot/toe/in the door phrase to get an opportunity to start working in an organization or business, especially when this will give you more opportunities in the future She got her foot in the door working as a researcher on a TV show.… … Useful english dictionary
Show — Show, v. t. [imp. {Showed}; p. p. {Shown}or {Showed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Showing}. It is sometimes written {shew}, {shewed}, {shewn}, {shewing}.] [OE. schowen, shewen, schewen, shawen, AS. sce[ a]wian, to look, see, view; akin to OS. scaw?n, OFries … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English