| 1. | Football. a kick in which the ball is dropped and then kicked before it touches the ground. Compare drop kick, place kick. |
| 2. | a small, shallow boat having a flat bottom and square ends, usually used for short outings on rivers or lakes and propelled by poling. |
| 3. | Football. to kick (a dropped ball) before it touches the ground. |
| 4. | to propel (a small boat) by thrusting against the bottom of a lake or stream, esp. with a pole. |
| 5. | to convey in or as if in a punt. |
| 6. | to punt a football. |
| 7. | to propel a boat by thrusting a pole against the bottom of a river, stream, or lake. |
| 8. | to travel or have an outing in a punt. |
| 9. | Informal. to equivocate or delay: If they ask you for exact sales figures, you'll have to punt. |

| 1. | to strike with the foot or feet: to kick the ball; to kick someone in the shins. |
| 2. | to drive, force, make, etc., by or as if by kicks. |
| 3. | Football. to score (a field goal or a conversion) by place-kicking or drop-kicking the ball. |
| 4. | Informal. to make (a car) increase in speed, esp. in auto racing: He kicked his car into high gear. |
| 5. | to strike in recoiling: The gun kicked his shoulder. |
| 6. | Slang. to give up or break (a drug addiction): Has he kicked the habit? |
| 7. | Poker. raise (def. 24). |
| 8. | Chiefly South Atlantic States. to reject as a suitor; jilt: He courted her for two years—then she kicked him. |
| 9. | to make a rapid, forceful thrust with the foot or feet: He kicked at the ball. You have to kick rapidly when using a crawl stroke. |
| 10. | to have a tendency to strike with the foot or feet: That horse kicks when you walk into his stall. |
| 11. | Informal. to resist, object, or complain: What's he got to kick about? |
| 12. | to recoil, as a firearm when fired. |
| 13. | to be actively or vigorously involved: He's still alive and kicking. |
| 14. | kick upstairs. upstairs (def. 8). |
| 15. | the act of kicking; a blow or thrust with the foot or feet. |
| 16. | power or disposition to kick: That horse has a mean kick. |
| 17. | Informal. an objection or complaint. |
| 18. | Informal.
|
| 19. | Informal.
|
| 20. | Football.
|
| 21. | a recoil, as of a gun. |
| 22. | Slang. a pocket: He kept his wallet in his side kick. |
| 23. | kicks, Slang. shoes (def. 1). |
| 24. | Glassmaking.
|
| 25. | kick about, to move from place to place frequently: He kicked about a good deal before settling down. |
| 26. | kick around, Informal.
|
| 27. | kick back,
|
| 28. | kick in,
|
| 29. | kick off,
|
| 30. | kick on, to switch on; turn on: He kicked on the motor and we began to move. |
| 31. | kick out, Informal.
|
| 32. | kick over, Informal. (of an internal-combustion engine) to begin ignition; turn over: The engine kicked over a few times but we couldn't get it started. |
| 33. | kick up,
|
| 34. | kick ass, Slang: Vulgar.
|
| 35. | kick in the ass, Slang: Vulgar. kick (def. 39a). |
| 36. | kick in the pants, Informal.
|
| 37. | kick in the teeth, an abrupt, often humiliating setback; rebuff: Her refusal even to talk to me was a kick in the teeth. |
| 38. | kick over the traces. trace 2 (def. 3). |
| 39. | kick the bucket, Slang. bucket (def. 15). |
| 40. | kick the tin, Australian. to give a donation; contribute. |

kick (off)
|
punt
[pənt]
|
punt
(From the punch line of an old joke referring to American football: "Drop back 15 yards and punt!") 1. To give up, typically without any intention of retrying. "Let's punt the movie tonight." "I was going to hack all night to get this feature in, but I decided to punt" may mean that you've decided not to stay up all night, and may also mean you're not ever even going to put in the feature.
2. More specifically, to give up on figuring out what the Right Thing is and resort to an inefficient hack.
3. A design decision to defer solving a problem, typically because one cannot define what is desirable sufficiently well to frame an algorithmic solution. "No way to know what the right form to dump the graph in is - we'll punt that for now."
4. To hand a tricky implementation problem off to some other section of the design. "It's too hard to get the compiler to do that; let's punt to the run-time system."
[The Jargon File]