kick in (something)• Hence the special holiday offers about to kick in.• Door kicked in and rented videostolen.• My adrenaline kicked in and the world got quieter.• That Rogaine better kick in before the millennium.• A stainedglasswindow was recently kicked in - causing fifteen hundred poundsworth of damage.• On another occasion he kicked in the glass in a series of school doors.• I felt like I had been kicked in the stomach.• SunSoft will be kicking in with its ONC+.
kick somebody’s head/face/teeth in• It goes with some people wanting to kick my head in.• Lou and Vanburst into tears and Hamburglar kicks their heads in.• So they are all there, kicking our teeth in.• But they would kick your head in if you spilt their pint just the same.