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The phrase “bail out of” is correct and can be used in written English.
This phrase is typically used to mean exiting a situation quickly or abruptly. For example, “The teenagers decided to bail out of the party after the police showed up.”.
Exact(38)
Is it time to bail out of stocks?
Should they bail out of mutual funds and equities?
Eventually, the attention became too overwhelming and we had to bail out of the pub.
Bush managed to bail out of his burning plane but his two crewmen were killed.
Another speaker referred to "those of us stupid enough not to bail out" of Interpublic stock.
"Our philosophy is that we don't bail out of a sector," she said.
Similar(21)
Initially he opposed a bail-out of AIG, then supported it after the fact.
The bail-out of the car industry, for instance, was what saved Michigan.
In 1995 the IMF and the United States jointly arranged a bail-out of Mexico.
A government bail-out of the Detroit carmakers would favour those firms over their competitors.
The unword was alternativlos (no alternative), as in "the bail-out of Greece was alternativlos".
More suggestions(25)
bailed out of custody
bail something out of
bailed out of debt
bailed out of chip
could bail out of
caution out of
save out of
parole out of
rescue out of
deposit out of
lease out of
bond out of
security out of
balloon out of
salvage out of
guarantee out of
rehabilitation out of
saving out of
saved out of
ball out of
bonding out of
to exit of
to rescue of
salvation of
life saving of
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com