Clean out phrasal verb informal
Make the inside of something clean or tidy
I spent nearly two hours cleaning out the house.
He was assigned to clean out the warehouse.
Spend so much money on something that one now has very little left
This luxurious handbag cleaned me out.
Take or use all the resource or money that a person or organization has
There is no food left. Someone must have cleaned it out.
This project cleaned out our funds.
Remove parts or people to improve a group or organization
After the loss of the first round, the coach decided to clean out some members.
Very clean
Very clean and tidy.
1. To remove something from something else by cutting
2. To refuse to allow someone to do something on a team or other roster
3. To remove a portion of a creative work, such as a written work or a film by editing
Used to describe someone or something that becomes neat and clean after having been fixed up, dressed up or cleaned up
The verb "clean" should be conjugated according to its tense.