Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
I did my best to flunk out of high school.
"All the more reason not to risk getting flunked out!"
What was she trying to do, get him to flunk out?
"So they thought I might flunk out and come back?"
He had recently flunked out of school and been drafted.
Said it would be a waste of time, because I'd flunk out the first year.
That everyone on the floor is going to flunk out by Christmas, including you.
I flunked out of law school, and Reggie gave me a job.
About 5 percent of students in the language program flunk out before their freshman year.
Early in 1960, Norton flunked out of college and the social work degree he was working on.
We don't want people that are going to flunk out.
He nearly flunked out, and the Depression made it almost impossible to find work.
He flunked out of college, and worked in a steel mill.
Despite nearly flunking out his first semester, Wood did well in college.
He seldom went to class and was in danger of flunking out.
He flunked out after the first semester of his sophomore year.
He started every game, but flunked out of school.
David had flunked out, I thought, just like Michael said.
There was no reason to tell the doctor he'd flunked out and would be drafted anyway.
She'd not only flunked out of college, but she had no marketable skills to her name.
Page, pure and simple, was not a student; he flunked out.
"I wanted to flunk out and go back for another three years, but they don't let you do that," he said.
And fully half the trainees flunk out during their training.
I knew I was going to flunk out after that.
He flunked out of law school, then returned and excelled at his studies.