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Discover Ludwig"bug out" is a commonly used phrase in written English and is considered grammatically correct.
It is an idiomatic expression that means to leave or depart quickly and unexpectedly, often in a state of panic or urgency. Example: "When the fire alarm went off, the students bugged out of the building in a frenzy."
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I would totally "bug out" to this in the club.
If the balloon goes up, however, she and the children would bug out with him.
"When he yells and scream, they bug out; that's why you want to beat him," Stricker said with a smile.
"To tell you the truth, I used to bug out," Edwin recalled, sitting in a coffee shop near his family's home in Queens.
"Pretty early on, when implementing the 'infinite' worlds, I knew the game would start to bug out at long distances," Persson told me.
"You can bug out over there," said Jessica Nunez from Rego Park, Queens, who, for all that, would usually travel to the strip by subway.
Similar(10)
Time to hum-bug out!
As a teenager, he packed himself a "bug-out bag".
His "bug-out bag" is always ready.Mr Charles has written a short fold-out guide of his own: "Emergency Bag Essentials: Everything You Need to Bug Out".
While he runs, Zeizel keeps what he calls a bug-out bag within reach.
So would the dog, which would carry its food and collapsible bowl in its own strap-on doggy-bug-out-bag.Oh no, not ISome Americans find survivalists sinister.
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