make free with

Verb

 * 1) To take advantage of (someone); to treat (someone) with too much familiarity, take liberties with (someone or something)
 * 2) * 1817, The Trial Between Mark Browne, Esq. and Martin Jos. Blake, Esq. for Adultery, London: John Fairburn,
 * Mr. Browne protested he had never made free with any woman but his wife, since his marriage.
 * 1) To exploit (something), use freely, use to one's own advantage
 * 2) To take (something) freely, help oneself to
 * 3) * 1767, Isaac Bickerstaffe, Love in a Village, Act I, Scene II,
 * I left my father's house unknown to any one, having made free with a coat and jacket of our gardener's which fitted me, by way of disguise:
 * 1) To take (something) freely, help oneself to
 * 2) * 1767, Isaac Bickerstaffe, Love in a Village, Act I, Scene II,
 * I left my father's house unknown to any one, having made free with a coat and jacket of our gardener's which fitted me, by way of disguise: