How to Say "remove me" in Spanish
The Spanish word for “remove me” is “sácame” — A2 level. This is a very common word in everyday Spanish.

Examples
Por favor, sácame de esta reunión; es aburridísima.
Please, get me out of this meeting; it is incredibly boring.
¡Sácame de aquí! Hay una araña enorme.
Get me out of here! There's a huge spider.
Sácame a bailar, me encanta esa canción.
Take me out to dance, I love that song.
Command + Pronoun Structure
In Spanish, when you give a direct command (like 'saca' for 'tú'), any small words that receive the action (like 'me', 'te', 'lo') must be physically attached to the end of the command word.
Pronoun Order
If you use two attached pronouns, the indirect one (who benefits, e.g., 'me') always comes before the direct one (what is acted upon, e.g., 'lo'). Example: 'Sácamelo' (Take it out for me).
Misplacing the Pronoun
Mistake: “Me saca de aquí.”
Correction: ¡Sácame de aquí! The small word 'me' only goes before the verb if the command is negative (e.g., 'No me saques').
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