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| an extraordinary or unusual thing, person, or event; an exceptional example or instance. |
| a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question. |
| put out | |
| —vb | |
| 1. | (often passive) |
| a. to annoy; anger | |
| b. to confound or disturb; confuse | |
| 2. | to extinguish or douse (a fire, light, etc): he put out the fire |
| 3. | to poke forward: to put out one's tongue |
| 4. | to be or present a source of inconvenience or annoyance to (a person): I hope I'm not putting you out |
| 5. | to issue or publish; broadcast: the authorities put out a leaflet |
| 6. | to render unconscious |
| 7. | to dislocate: he put out his shoulder in the accident |
| 8. | to show or exert: the workers put out all their energy in the campaign |
| 9. | to pass, give out (work to be done) at different premises |
| 10. | to lend (money) at interest |
| 11. | cricket to dismiss (a player or team) |
| 12. | baseball to cause (a batter or runner) to be out by a fielding play |
| —n | |
| 13. | baseball a play in which the batter or runner is put out |
put (so) definition
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put out
Extinguish, as in We put out the fire before we turned in. [Early 1500s]
Also, put to sea. Leave a port or harbor, as in They put out yesterday morning. [Late 1500s]
Publish, as in They put out a weekly newsletter. [Early 1500s]
Engage in sex. This usage is applied solely to women, as in She had a reputation for putting out. [Vulgar slang; mid-1900s] Also see put one out.