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put(verb)/pʊt/ /pʊt/Verb Forms- to move something into a particular place or position
- Put the cases down there, please.
- Did you put sugar in my coffee?
- Put your hand up if you need more paper.
- to move something into a particular place or position using force
- He put his fist through a glass door.
- to cause somebody/something to go to a particular place
- Her family put her into a nursing home.
- It was the year the Americans put a man on the moon.
- to attach or fix something to something else
- We had to put new locks on all the doors.
Extra Examples- We're not allowed to put posters on the walls.
- Can you help me put the roof rack on the car?
- to write something or make a mark on something
- Put your name here.
- Friday at 11? I'll put it in my diary.
- I couldn't read what she had put.
- to bring somebody/something into the state or condition mentioned
- I was put in charge of the office.
- The incident put her in a bad mood.
- Put yourself in my position. What would you have done?
- I tried to put the matter into perspective.
- Don't go putting yourself at risk.
- I am determined to put things right.
- It was time to put their suggestion into practice.
- This new injury will put him out of action for several weeks.
- He put Ray on guard with a gun.
- to make somebody/something feel something or be affected by something
- Her new job has put a great strain on her.
- They put pressure on her to resign.
- It's time you put a stop to this childish behaviour.
- to express or state something in a particular way
- She put it very tactfully.
- Put simply, we accept their offer or go bankrupt.
- Simply put, the film is a masterpiece.
- I was, to put it mildly, annoyed (= I was extremely angry).
- Putting it bluntly, the project was a disaster.
- He was too trusting—or, to put it another way, he had no head for business.
- The meat was—how shall I put it?—a little overdone.
- As T.S. Eliot puts it…
- She had never tried to put this feeling into words.
- Can you help me put this letter into good English, please?
- I thought you put your points very well.
- to give or attach a particular level of importance, trust, value, etc. to something
- Our company puts the emphasis on quality.
- He put a limit on the amount we could spend.
- to consider somebody/something to belong to the class or level mentioned
- I'd put her in the top rank of modern novelists.
- to throw the shot
- used to say that you think somebody is capable of doing something wrong, illegal, etc.
- to have many sexual partners
- to suggest something to somebody to see if they can argue against it
- I put it to you that you are the only person who had a motive for the crime.
- to persuade somebody to believe something that is not true
- Don't try to put one over on me!
- to force somebody to experience something difficult or unpleasant
- They really put me through it (= asked me difficult questions) at the interview.
- used when comparing or contrasting somebody/something with a group of other people or things to mean ‘combined’ or ‘in total’
- Your department spent more last year than all the others put together.
- used to tell somebody to stop just talking about something and actually do it, show it, etc.
Word Origin- Old English (recorded only in the verbal noun putung), of unknown origin; compare with dialect pote ‘to push, thrust’ (an early sense of the verb put).
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