| the offspring of a zebra and a donkey. |
| an arrangement of five objects, as trees, in a square or rectangle, one at each corner and one in the middle. |
put (pʊt) ![]() | |
| —vb , puts, putting, put | |
| 1. | to cause to be (in a position or place): to put a book on the table |
| 2. | to cause to be (in a state, relation, etc): to put one's things in order |
| 3. | ( |
| 4. | to set or commit (to an action, task, or duty), esp by force: he put him to work |
| 5. | to render, transform, or translate: to put into English |
| 6. | to set (words) in a musical form (esp in the phrase put to music) |
| 7. | ( |
| 8. | ( |
| 9. | ( |
| 10. | to state; express: to put it bluntly |
| 11. | to set or make (an end or limit): he put an end to the proceedings |
| 12. | to present for consideration in anticipation of an answer or vote; propose: he put the question to the committee; I put it to you that one day you will all die |
| 13. | to invest (money) in; give (support) to: he put five thousand pounds into the project |
| 14. | to impart: to put zest into a party |
| 15. | to throw or cast |
| 16. | not know where to put oneself to feel awkward or embarrassed |
| 17. | put paid to to destroy irrevocably and utterly: the manager's disfavour put paid to their hopes for promotion |
| 18. | stay put to refuse to leave; keep one's position |
| —n | |
| 19. | a throw or cast, esp in putting the shot |
| 20. | stock exchange Compare call Also called: put option an option to sell a stated amount of securities at a specified price during a specified limited period |
| [C12 puten to push; related to Old English potian to push, Norwegian, Icelandic pota to poke] | |
| put down | |
| —vb | |
| 1. | to make a written record of |
| 2. | to repress: to put down a rebellion |
| 3. | to consider; account: they put him down for an ignoramus |
| 4. | to attribute: I put the mistake down to his inexperience |
| 5. | to put to death, because of old age or illness: the vet put the cat down |
| 6. | to table on the agenda: the MPs put down a motion on the increase in crime |
| 7. | to put (a baby) to bed |
| 8. | to dismiss, reject, or humiliate |
| —n | |
| 9. | a cruelly crushing remark |
put (so) definition
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put (so) definition
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put-down definition
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put down
Write down; also, enter in a list. For example, Please put down my name for a free ticket, or Put me down as a subscriber. [Second half of 1500s]
Bring to an end, repress, as in They managed to put down the rebellion in a single day, or We've got to put down these rumors about a takeover. [c. 1300]
Kill a sick animal, as in The vet said the dog must be put down. [Mid-1500s] Also see put away, def. 5.
Belittle, disparage, criticize, as in Her husband was always putting her down. [c. 1400] Also see run down, def. 6.
Ascribe, attribute, as in We put her poor performance down to stage fright. [Late 1700s]
Regard, classify, as in We put her down as a hypochondriac. [Mid-1800s]
Pay a deposit, as in We put down $2,000 for the car.
Store for future use, as in David put down ten cases of this year's Chablis. [Mid-1800s]
Land in an aircraft; also, land an aircraft, as in What time will we put down at Heathrow? or She put the plane down exactly on the runway. [c. 1930]
Put a child to bed, as in The sitter said she'd put Brian down at 8:30. [Second half of 1900s]