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单词 to put over
释义

> as lemmas

to put over
to put over
1. transitive. To defer, postpone; = to put off 1 at Phrasal verbs 1. Now chiefly North American.Frequently in legal contexts.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > a suitable time or opportunity > untimeliness > delay or postponement > delay [verb (transitive)]
forslowc888
eldc897
forsita940
gele971
lengOE
drilla1300
delayc1300
onfrestc1300
tarryc1320
jornc1330
dretchc1380
defer1382
forbida1387
to put offa1387
to put (also set) (something) in (or on) delaya1393
dilate1399
fordrawa1400
to put overc1410
latch?c1422
adjournc1425
prolongc1425
proloynec1425
rejournc1425
to put in respite1428
sleuthc1430
respitea1450
prorogue1453
refer1466
sleep1470
supersede1482
respectc1487
postpone1496
overseta1500
respett1500
enjourna1513
relong1523
retract1524
tarde1524
track1524
to fode forth1525
tract1527
protract1528
further1529
to make stay of1530
surcease1530
prorogate1534
to fay upon longc1540
linger1543
retard?1543
slake1544
procrastine1548
reprieve1548
remit1550
suspense1556
leave1559
shiftc1562
suspend1566
procrastinate1569
dally1574
post1577
to hold off1580
drift1584
loiter1589
postpose1598
to take one's (own) timea1602
flag1602
slug1605
elong1610
belay1613
demur1613
tardya1616
to hang up1623
frist1637
disjourn1642
future1642
off1642
waive1653
superannuate1655
perendinate1656
stave1664
detard1675
remora1686
to put back1718
withhold1726
protract1737
to keep over1847
to hold over1853
laten1860
to lay over1885
hold1891
back-burner1975
c1410 in C. Horstmann Yorkshire Writers (1896) II. 451 (MED) Ther þow hast deseruyd euerelastyngliche his wrathe and to be dampned for euere, he putteth-ouer his vengeaunce and..suffreth vs to amende owre defautes and punysscheth vs but a while.
1524 King Henry VIII in J. Strype Eccl. Memorials (1721) I. App. xiii. 28 By delaies the matier was alwaies tracked, and put over without any fruteful determination.
1618 J. Hales Let. 2 Dec. 14 in Golden Remains (1659) Both these questions were put over to the next Session.
1655 in E. Nicholas Nicholas Papers (1892) II. 210 I heard last weeke the day was putt over till Wensday last.
1702 Three Questions Resolved 29 If the Presbytery be divided in their Opinions, the Question is, under an injoined silence, put over to the next Synod.
1828 N. Webster Amer. Dict. Eng. Lang. To put over,..to defer; to postpone. The court put over the cause to the next term.
1871 ‘M. Twain’ Lett. to Publishers (1967) 55 If you can without fail issue the book on the 15th of May—putting the Sketch book over till another time.
1926 J. Black You can't Win xxii. 343 We went to court again the next day, but were put over twenty-four hours on the plea of the police that witnesses were on their way from Canada.
1978 H. Kemelman Thursday Rabbi walked Out (1979) xxx. 145 The only thing to do is to put it over for a week.
2006 Calgary (Alberta) Sun (Nexis) 13 July 24 Dagenais remains in custody and the case was put over until tomorrow.
2. transitive.
a. Falconry. Of a hawk: to pass (food) from the crop to the stomach. Also intransitive. Cf. endue v. 2a.Formerly also (occasionally) more generally: †to digest (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > order Falconiformes (falcons, etc.) > family Accipitridae (hawks, etc.) > [verb (intransitive)] > actions of hawk, etc.
mutea1475
mutessa1475
to put overa1475
feat1508
to check at the fista1529
feakc1575
souse1589
to clip it1616
embowel1618
unenterpen1647
gather1674
enterpen1736
scatter1771
the world > animals > birds > order Falconiformes (falcons, etc.) > family Accipitridae (hawks, etc.) > [verb (transitive)] > actions of hawks, etc.
enterpena1475
rousea1475
mutea1529
to put over1575
souse1589
hawk1825
a1475 Dis. Hawk (Harl. 2340) f. 33v, in Middle Eng. Dict. at Putten At þe nexte fedyng, take A grete morcell, alsomych as sche may put ouer..& lat hyr hete þat.
1486 Bk. St. Albans sig. a vij An hawke puttith ouer when she remeuith the mete from hir goorge in to hir bowillis.
1565 J. Hall Expositiue Table 81 in tr. Lanfranc Most Excellent Woorke Chirurg. Sodden egges are of harde concoction, of grosse nourishment, and are hardly put ouer.
1575 G. Turberville Bk. Faulconrie 332 Sometimes..a Hawke cannot well indew nor put ouer hir meate.
1648 Bp. J. Hall Select Thoughts 150 Death did but taste of him, could not devour him, much less put him over.
1678 J. Ray tr. F. Willughby Ornithol. iii. xi. 435 How to remedy that Hawk which endeweth not, nor putteth over as she should do.
1704 Dict. Rusticum at Enseams If she have put over her Meat, so as that there is nothing left in her Gorge, then give her warm Meat.
1908 D. C. Phillott in tr. Taymūr Mīrzā Bāz-nāma-yi Nāṣirī xxii. 107 By that time she would have ‘put over’ the whole of her food: nothing would remain in the crop.
1992 E. Ford Falconry: Art & Pract. ii. 23/2 After flying, the hawk should be returned to her perch to put over her crop in peace.
b. Scottish. To swallow, ‘get down’; to consume; (also) to make (something) easier to swallow. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > consumption of food or drink > [verb (transitive)]
brookc950
abiteOE
haveOE
afangOE
takec1175
notea1200
usec1300
spendc1380
consumec1400
partake1602
pree1680
discuss1751
tuck1784
to put down1795
to be (also go) at the ——1796
go1830
kill1833
to put away1839
down1852
to put over1880
to wrap (oneself) (a)round1880
shift1896
1880 Jamieson's Etymol. Dict. Sc. Lang. (new ed.) at To Put owre ‘I canna put it owre;’ ‘Tak some milk to put owre your bite.’
1895 A. G. Murdoch Sc. Readings III. 10 ‘Here, pit owre that,’ handing the well-filled china cup to her visitor.
1929 in A. W. Johnston & A. Johnston Old-lore Misc. IX. ii. 81 Whin dey hed pittin ower a' da whiskey, an' waar a' croos.
3. transitive.
a. To transfer (a right, property, etc.); to make over to. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > transfer of property > transfer [verb (transitive)]
assign1297
bequeathc1305
alienc1400
analy1405
releasea1425
alienate?a1475
to make over1478
convey1495
transport1523
to put over1542
dispone?1548
design1573
pass1587
to set over1594
transfer1598
abalienate1646
attorn1649
demise1670
enure1736
to will away1773
divest1790
1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes ii. f. 227 The thirde piece he putte ouer to Arius a burgoise of the same citee.
1632 H. Hawkins tr. J.-P. de la Serre Sweete Thoughts Death & Eternity 59 Laertius Neuola puts ouer the right of Maiority to his brother, and consequently his richest pretensions.
a1649 J. Winthrop Hist. New Eng. (1825) (modernized text) I. 381 It were good he..paid his sister her £100 which he promised when I put over his land to him.
1653 D. Dickson Brief Explic. Other 50 Psalmes 226 Albeit people in covenant with God..be justly plagued by seeing holy ordinances put over in the hands of profane men for their cause.
b. To refer (a matter) to a person for consideration, decision, etc. (formerly with other constructions); †to refer (a person) to an authority, source, etc. (obsolete). rare after 18th cent.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > judgement or decision > advice > advise [verb (transitive)] > ask advice of or seek counsel from > refer (a matter, etc.) to a higher authority
submitc1449
refer1469
defer1490
reject1533
to put over1573
revoke1599
consult1618
compromise1651
subcommit1652
relegate1846
1573 T. Cartwright Replye to Answere Whitgifte 28 I will put you ouer to the learned treatises of the godly newe wryters which doe refute this distinction.
a1616 W. Shakespeare King John (1623) i. i. 62 For the certaine knowledge of that truth, I put you o're to heauen, and to my mother. View more context for this quotation
a1653 H. Binning Wks. (1842) 343 The matter is put over upon a mediator.
1714 C. Mather Perfect Recovery 30 I will put the Matter over into the Hands of a Preacher.
1792 J. Gutch tr. A. à Wood Hist. & Antiq. Univ. Oxf. I. 516 The King..put over the decision of the matter to the Archb. of Canterbury, [et al.].
1979 Rep. Consumer Health Warnings Alcoholic Beverages (U.S. Congress & Senate Subcommittee Alcoholism & Drug Abuse) 73 Why do we not put it over to FDA, where they have expertise and let them do it.
4.
a. transitive. To transport to the other side of a body of water. Cf. over adv. 5a.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > transport > [verb (transitive)] > across
overcarrya1382
to set overc1540
to put over1569
to take over1573
traject1635
put1636
cross1804
to pass over1832
to get across1909
society > travel > travel by water > [verb (transitive)] > sail across
oversail?a1400
to put over1569
transfrete1595
transfretate1653
ply1700
passage1987
1569 T. Stocker tr. Diodorus Siculus Hist. Successors Alexander ii. iii. 48 When Eumenes see nyght drawe on, and the greate difficultie and hardenesse to put ouer the baggage, hee caused those that were already passed, to returne.
c1595 Capt. Wyatt in G. F. Warner Voy. R. Dudley to W. Indies (1899) 36 To give them a faire gale to putt them over to the maine.
1610 P. Holland tr. W. Camden Brit. i. 49 By swimming they put the horses over.
1722 D. Defoe Jrnl. Plague Year 154 So putting themselves over, he directed them to leave the Boat.
1868 E. Bennett Phantom of Forest xii. 161 If you will give us something more to eat, and then put us over, we will always think well of Methoto.
1904 J. C. Harris Tar-baby 28 Here de creek come a-risin'... ‘Brer Rabbit,’ sez de 'Gater,..‘Dis one time I'll put you over.’
1919 J. Buchan Mr. Standfast viii. 153 In the mellow gloaming I strolled into the clachan and got a boat to put me over to the inn.
1985 A. R. Burn in I. Gershevitch Cambr. Hist. Iran II. vi. 293 The people, not daring to keep him, put him over to the neighbouring island of Lesbos.
b. intransitive. To sail or go across a body of water; to cross. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > [verb (intransitive)] > travel across or beyond
to come overeOE
overfareOE
overstridea1200
overgoc1225
to go over1415
cross1486
forpass1486
to make over1488
to put over1590
to make through1606
traject1711
1590 J. White Fifth Voy. in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations (1600) 291 Not finding any of our consorts at ye Matanças, we put ouer again to the cape of Florida.
1617 Abp. G. Abbot Briefe Descr. Worlde (ed. 4) sig. T3v Cartagena, a citie in the maine Land, to which he put ouer.
a1656 J. Ussher Ann. World (1658) vi. 391 He put over from thence to Phocaea.
1720 H. Cornwall Observ. Several Voy. India 4 I advise you to run nearest sixty Leagues by Account up the Æthiopia Side from Mount Felix before you put over.
1760 G. Walker Voy. & Cruises II. 168 In case they had been obliged to put over to the Morocco coast, he likewise gave further directions.
1854 Times 21 Apr. 8/3 They seemed as if they intended, as soon as it became possible, to put over to Revel.
5. transitive. Chiefly Scottish and Irish English (northern). To get over, get through, esp. to succeed in passing (time); to survive, make it through (a period of time). Also intransitive: to last out, survive; to get by, manage, ‘make it’. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > amending > restoration > restoration of a person > recovery from misfortune, error, etc. > [verb (transitive)]
overcomea1225
recoverc1330
overputa1382
overpassa1387
passa1500
digest1577
to put over1593
outwear1598
overseta1600
to make a saving game of it1600
repassa1631
to get over ——1662
overgeta1729
overcast1788
overa1800
the world > time > spending time > spend time or allow time to pass [verb (transitive)]
overdoOE
adreeOE
wreaka1300
to draw forthc1300
dispend1340
pass1340
drivea1375
wastec1381
occupyc1384
overpassa1387
to pass over ——a1393
usec1400
spend1423
contrive?a1475
overdrive1487
consumea1500
to pass forth1509
to drive off1517
lead1523
to ride out1529
to wear out, forth1530
to pass away?1550
to put offc1550
shiftc1562
to tire out1563
wear1567
to drive out1570
entertainc1570
expire1589
tire1589
outwear1590
to see out1590
outrun1592
outgo1595
overshoot1597
to pass out1603
fleeta1616
elapse1654
term1654
trickle1657
to put over1679
absorb1686
spin1696
exercise1711
kill1728
to get through ——1748
to get over ——1751
tickc1870
fill1875
1593 Passionate Morrice sig. F Which bad beginning was carelesly put ouer with the conceiued ioy of his presence.
a1600 ( W. Stewart tr. H. Boece Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) 14945 But ydilnes for till put ouir the dais.
1679 Bp. G. Burnet Hist. Reformation: 1st Pt. iii. 345 To engage him in discourse, and so put over the time, and make him forget his pain.
1712 in J. Stuart Misc. Spalding Club (1841) I. 217 I have put over some of my weary hours in this place..by writing and publishing some thoughts.
1815 W. Scott Guy Mannering III. vi. 104 Ye'll be wanting eilding now, or something to pitt ower the winter.
1823 J. Wilson Trials Margaret Lyndsay iv. 29 The stranger offered..money; but she..said they could all put over very well till their father was set free.
1851 T. Carlyle Life J. Sterling ii. iv. 176 There..he might put over the rigorous period of this present year.
1880 W. Robbie Heir of Glendornie xvii. 151 I never thocht I wid hae pitten ower the nicht.
1896 M. Hamilton Across Ulster Bog 10 The doctor has very bad behopes he'll put over the winter.
1920 D. H. Edwards Muirside 228 I'm unco busy the nicht, but if ye could pit ower till Monday I'll make you sure o't syne.
2007 community.livejournal.com 31 Jan. (O.E.D. archive) Ye've murdered men wha ainly did whit they had tae in order tae pit ower.
2020 I. Howat in Lallans 97 16 Quate vices Telt o thaim is pit ower the waur Jist tae dee in hame watters.
6. transitive. colloquial. To knock over or down. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1859 H. Kingsley Recoll. Geoffry Hamlyn III. iv. 87 I've put over a parrot at twenty yards with it [sc. a pistol].
7. transitive.
a. Baseball. = to put across 1 at Phrasal verbs 1. Frequently in to put it over.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > baseball > play baseball [verb (transitive)] > actions of pitcher
pitch1848
curve1877
to put over1891
scatter1892
save1899
to put across1903
walk1905
fan1909
plunk1909
southpaw1911
whiff1914
sidearm1921
sidearm1922
outpitch1928
blow1938
hang1967
wild pitch1970
1887 Daily News (Frederick, Maryland) 30 Aug. Driscoll was afraid to put the ball over the plate. Whenever it came in reach the Westminster boys had to ‘chase leather’.]
1891 Fitchburg (Mass.) Daily Sentinel 25 Apr. 7/2 Rusie put the ball over and Long hit it out.
1897 Chicago Tribune 11 June 6/3 They wouldn't swing at all sorts of pitches and made the Duquesne twirler ‘put it over’.
1909 Washington Post 23 Aug. 4/3 Johnson started to pass Cobb... Then he put one over, to which the batter, of course, paid no attention.
1985 Chron.-Telegram (Elyria, Ohio) 30 Apr. b5/6 When their pitcher put the ball over, we didn't hit it.
2001 G. D'Amato in J. Canfield et al. Chicken Soup for Baseball Fan's Soul iii. 131 Just put it over. He ain't gonna swing.
b. colloquial (originally U.S.).
(a) to put one over (also to put it over): to inflict a defeat or gain an advantage on a person; to get the better of someone. Cf. to put it all over at Phrases 11.
ΚΠ
1901 National Police Gaz. (U.S.) 9 Mar. 10/4 He gave me a bloody good hiding at Jacksonville; but at that I think I could put one over on him the next time we meet.
1907 Washington Post 3 Nov. 16/4 Spoiled Greeley's scoop. Newspaper man tells how he put one over on editor.
1958 People 4 May 8/3 I cannot see her letting any of the Italian or French sex~pots put one over on her.
1972 P. G. Wodehouse Pearls, Girls, & Monty Bodkin x. 150 You can't do the dirty on a business competitor just to stop him from putting it over on you in a business deal.
1995 Independent 13 Oct. 19/1 He is now the senior former prime minister, putting one over on Baroness Thatcher.
(b) To perpetrate (a deception or hoax) on a person; to achieve by deceit. Chiefly as to put one over.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > cheating, fraud > treat fraudulently, cheat [verb (transitive)] > outwit, get the better of
undergoa1325
circumvene1526
crossbitec1555
circumvent1564
gleek1577
outreach1579
fob1583
overreach1594
fub1600
encompassa1616
out-craftya1616
out-knave1648
mump1649
jockey1708
come1721
nail1735
slew1813
Jew1825
to sew up1837
to play (it) low down (on)1864
outfox1872
beat1873
outcraft1879
to get a beat on1889
old soldier1892
to put one over1905
to get one over on1912
to get one over1921
outsmart1926
shaft1959
1905 Chicago Tribune 19 June 2/5 Anson fools the police... ‘I put one over on the umpires that time,’ he said gleefully.
1912 Lincoln (Nebraska) Daily News 5 Apr. 1/2 He declares that the public service corporations of this city are trying to put one over on us by secretly working for the commission charter.
1924 W. M. Raine Troubled Waters xix. 209 What are you trying to put over on me? Why don't you go to Mac and ask him?
1928 A. S. W. Rosenbach Books & Bidders 117 One of the greatest hoaxes ever planned was put over by a French forger.
1976 Church Times 30 July 7/2 She may have been fleeced in Florence, robbed in Ravenna, grossly overcharged in Ostia..; but Baedeker at least has not tried to put one over on her.
2000 J. Goodwin Danny Boy xi. 234 Bollocks, mate. Carl's puttin one over on you to get his stringy corpse on the telly.
8. transitive. To present convincingly or effectively; to communicate, convey. Cf. to put across 3 at Phrasal verbs 1.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > [verb (transitive)] > successfully
to put over1908
to put across1910
the mind > mental capacity > belief > belief, trust, confidence > act of convincing, conviction > bring to belief, convince [verb (transitive)] > by assertion
tella1275
assurea1535
over-talk1605
to talk over1734
to put over1908
to put across1910
1908 La Crosse (Wisconsin) Tribune 14 Nov. 9/4 The burnt cork artist..put over a fair turn. His coon dialect was somewhat labored but acceptable.
1928 Weekly Disp. 24 June 8/4 Mr Hayes's humour is not at all easy to ‘put over’, mechanically [sc. on gramophone records].
1966 Listener 17 Mar. 380/2 I did not know how to select what I wanted to do or really put over emotion.
1978 D. Murphy Place Apart iii. 59 They agreed with his anti-ecumenism..but they didn't like the way he put it over.
2006 Halifax Courier (Nexis) 15 Nov. Even though he is not the best singer in the business at least he puts over the songs with feeling.
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更新时间:2025/1/11 20:03:28