extricate yourself/somebody from something• He had good taste and was most helpful in extricating one fromawkward situations.• I helped ProfessorCousinsextricate himself from his chair.• This one is about the difficulty of extricating oneself fromInternetentanglements, and specifically about bringing e-mail exchanges to an end.• He can speak eloquently of the need to reduce the size of government and extricate it from our private lives.• They can also help a flounderingorganizationextricate itself from the depths of a self-inflictedmalaise.• A complicated story unfolds, with Mitchum desperately trying to extricate himself from the trap.• It is not known when Napoleon managed to extricate himself from this chaos.
extricate somebody/yourself from something• I helped Professor Cousins extricate himself from his chair.• He can speak eloquently of the need to reduce the size of government and extricate it from our private lives.• Then he turned, extricating himself from the clutterround his feet, and went, with greatdignity, downstairs.• It is easiest to extricate rabbits from the nets if you kill them first.• Gao Yang had an unobstructed view of the man extricating his foot from the pot.• A complicated story unfolds, with Mitchum desperately trying to extricate himself from the trap.• It is not known when Napoleon managed to extricate himself from this chaos.
Originextricate
(1600-1700)Latin past participle of extricare, from tricae“small difficulties”