单词 | to pull out |
释义 | > as lemmasto pull out to pull out 1. a. transitive. To draw out with a dragging or tugging action; to pluck out; to extract, remove. Also: to withdraw (support).to pull one's finger out: see to pull one's finger out at finger n. Phrases 4v. to pull out all the stops: see stop n.2 16. ΘΚΠ the world > space > place > removal or displacement > extraction > extract [verb (transitive)] > pull out or up updrawc1290 plitchc1330 to pull outc1330 to pull upa1382 cleck1401 c1330 Short Metrical Chron. (Auch.) 2256 in PMLA (1931) 46 144 Dan simound ȝede & gadred frut, For soþe were plommes white; þe steles he puld out euerichon. a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) 1 Esdras ix. 3 I kutte my mantel & coote & pullide out [L. evelli] þe herys of myn heued & berd & sat weilynge. a1425 (a1400) Prick of Conscience (Galba & Harl.) (1863) 1914 Yf þat tre war tite pulled oute..with al þe rotes aboute. c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) 938 (MED) He prekis in-to þe palais to pull out þe quene. a1500 (?c1450) Merlin 136 (MED) He pulde oute hys swerde and spronge in a-monge hem. 1526 Bible (Tyndale) Luke xiv. f. cv Whiche of you shall have an asse, or an oxe, fallen into a pitt, and will nott straight waye pull him out on the saboth daye? a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 (1623) iv. vii. 16 We are like to haue biting Statutes Vnlesse his teeth be pull'd out . View more context for this quotation 1642 J. Eaton Honey-combe Free Justific. 206 The Dogge..will presently flie in ones face, and bee ready if he can to pull out ones throat. 1711 T. Hearne Remarks & Coll. 10 Mar. III. 133 He pull'd out a pen-knife & stabb'd Mr. Harley. 1746 P. Francis tr. Horace Art of Poetry in P. Francis & W. Dunkin tr. Horace Epistles 313 He fell in on purpose, and..Will hardly thank you, if you pull him out. 1840 G. Darley Thomas à Becket iii. vii. 75 Go you, pull him out by the ears. 1904 Mission Field June 71 Tweezers were used by the Indian men to pull out every hair that grew on their faces. 1955 J. P. Donleavy Ginger Man xvii. 187 Who's been meddling with the dresser and pulling out the drawers? 1974 Lethbridge (Alberta) Herald 10 Sept. 1/2 Unless work gets underway on the project this year, the gas company and the brewery will pull out their support. 2006 Vanity Fair (N.Y.) Feb. 106/3 He pulled out his wallet and displayed his ID. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > tailor or make clothes [verb (transitive)] > other fur13.. buttonc1380 lashc1440 pointa1470 set1530 tuft1535 vent1547 ruff1548 spangle1548 string1548 superbody1552 to pull out1553 quilt1555 flute1578 seam1590 seed1604 overtrim1622 ruffle1625 tag1627 furbelow1701 tuck1709 flounce1711 pipe1841 skirt1848 ruche1855 pouch1897 panel1901 stag1902 create1908 pin-fit1926 ease1932 pre-board1940 post-board1963 1553 in J. C. Jeaffreson Middlesex County Rec. (1886) I. 14 Unum par calligarum de panno laneo pulled oute with sarsenett. 1558 in A. Feuillerat Documents Office of Revels Queen Elizabeth (1908) 38 Undersleves of playne yellowe clothe of gowlde pulled oute under the armes with greene golde sarsenet. a1603 Q. Eliz. Wardr. in Leisure Hour (1884) 677/2 A pair of sleeves of gold, pulled out with lawn. c. intransitive. To admit of being pulled out or open. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > furniture and fittings > furniture [verb (intransitive)] > slide easily to pull out1920 1920 E. Ferber Half Portions ii. 59 I always use this gate-legged table. You see? It pulls out like this. 1943 Mod. Lang. Notes 58 12 Drawers pull out..easily. 1956 Life 2 Apr. 63/1 (advt.) So easy to load because it pulls out like a drawer—loads from the top without tiresome bending. 1979 Washington Post (Nexis) 16 Sept. (Mag.) 40 Another popular feature is a drawer that pulls out to reveal one or more garbage cans. 2004 Better Homes & Gardens Mar. 92/2 The teen designed the bed to pull out on drawer-style tracks. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > number > geometry > form or represent geometrically [verb (transitive)] > construct or manipulate geometric object to pull out?a1560 apply1570 coapt1570 quadrate1623 raise1647 join1660 range1670 project1673 rabat1868 unsquare1872 ?a1560 L. Digges Geom. Pract.: Pantometria (1571) i. xxxv. sig. L ij Pull out from the centre a right line to the like number of degrees. 3. intransitive. colloquial. To exert oneself vigorously; to work hard. Cf. sense 15b. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > effort or exertion > exert oneself or make an effort [verb (intransitive)] tillc897 stightlea1375 stretcha1375 wrestlea1382 to put it forthc1390 to put one's hand(s) to (also unto)a1398 paina1400 takea1400 to do one's busy pain (also care, cure, diligence)?a1430 to make great force?c1450 makec1485 to stir one's stumpsa1500 to bestir one's stumps1549 to make work1574 put1596 bestira1616 operate1650 to lay out1659 to be at pains1709 exerta1749 tew1787 maul1821 to take (the) trouble1830 to pull outc1835 bother1840 trouble1880 to buck up1890 hump1897 to go somea1911 c1835 G. Kent Mod. Flash Dict. 26/1 Pull out, come it strong. 1866 A. Trollope Belton Estate III. x. 272 There's no getting people really to pull out in this country. a1908 H. C. Hart MS Coll. Ulster Words in M. Traynor Eng. Dial. Donegal (1953) 221/1 Pull..-out, a command to workers to exert themselves. 4. intransitive. a. Of a boat or vehicle: to move out of a port, station, etc.; to leave with its passengers. Also with the passengers, driver, etc., as subject. ΘΚΠ society > travel > rail travel > [verb (intransitive)] > enter or leave station (of locomotive or train) to pull out1847 to pull in1893 society > travel > travel by water > [verb (intransitive)] > set out on a voyage > leave port to pull out1902 1847 R. Anderson Let. 6 Apr. in Artillery Officer in Mexican War (1911) 121 Having fired a few shots, a boat pulled out from town offering a surrender. 1868 Harper's Mag. Feb. 293/1 Breakfast over we ‘pulled out’, for the next station. 1891 C. Roberts Adrift in Amer. 18 The train that was to take me on..was nearly ready to ‘pull out’, as the phrase goes in America. 1902 C. J. C. Hyne Mr. Horrocks, Purser 105 We pull out from here next Tuesday. 1964 O. Ruhen in C. K. Stead N.Z. Short Stories (1976) 2nd Ser. 35 Men who, not so long ago, used to pull out to sea in a small boat. 1991 Mod. Railways Apr. 208/3 All was not over once we did pull out. We made two 45min stops in the middle of fields. b. Originally U.S. colloquial. Of a person or (in later use esp.) a military unit: to go away, depart; to clear out. Also: to set off for (now rare). ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > go away [verb (intransitive)] wendeOE i-wite971 ashakec975 shakeOE to go awayOE witea1000 afareOE agoOE atwendOE awayOE to wend awayOE awendOE gangOE rimeOE flitc1175 to fare forthc1200 depart?c1225 part?c1225 partc1230 to-partc1275 biwitec1300 atwitea1325 withdrawa1325 to draw awayc1330 passc1330 to turn one's (also the) backc1330 lenda1350 begonec1370 remuea1375 voidc1374 removec1380 to long awaya1382 twinc1386 to pass one's wayc1390 trussc1390 waive1390 to pass out ofa1398 avoida1400 to pass awaya1400 to turn awaya1400 slakec1400 wagc1400 returnc1405 to be gonea1425 muck1429 packc1450 recede1450 roomc1450 to show (a person) the feetc1450 to come offc1475 to take one's licence1475 issue1484 devoidc1485 rebatea1500 walka1500 to go adieua1522 pikea1529 to go one's ways1530 retire?1543 avaunt1549 to make out1558 trudge1562 vade?1570 fly1581 leave1593 wag1594 to get off1595 to go off1600 to put off1600 shog1600 troop1600 to forsake patch1602 exit1607 hence1614 to give offa1616 to take off1657 to move off1692 to cut (also slip) the painter1699 sheera1704 to go about one's business1749 mizzle1772 to move out1792 transit1797–1803 stump it1803 to run away1809 quit1811 to clear off1816 to clear out1816 nash1819 fuff1822 to make (take) tracks (for)1824 mosey1829 slope1830 to tail out1830 to walk one's chalks1835 to take away1838 shove1844 trot1847 fade1848 evacuate1849 shag1851 to get up and get1854 to pull out1855 to cut (the) cable(s)1859 to light out1859 to pick up1872 to sling one's Daniel or hook1873 to sling (also take) one's hook1874 smoke1893 screw1896 shoot1897 voetsak1897 to tootle off1902 to ship out1908 to take a (run-out, walk-out, etc.) powder1909 to push off1918 to bugger off1922 biff1923 to fuck off1929 to hit, split or take the breeze1931 to jack off1931 to piss offa1935 to do a mick1937 to take a walk1937 to head off1941 to take a hike1944 moulder1945 to chuff off1947 to get lost1947 to shoot through1947 skidoo1949 to sod off1950 peel1951 bug1952 split1954 poop1961 mugger1962 frig1965 society > travel > aspects of travel > departure, leaving, or going away > depart, leave, or go away [verb (intransitive)] to come awayeOE wendeOE i-wite971 ashakec975 shakeOE to go awayOE witea1000 afareOE agoOE awayOE dealc1000 goOE awendOE rimeOE to go one's wayOE flitc1175 depart?c1225 partc1230 to-partc1275 atwitea1325 withdrawa1325 to turn one's (also the) backc1330 lenda1350 begonec1370 remuea1375 removec1380 to long awaya1382 twinc1386 to pass one's wayc1390 trussc1390 to turn awaya1400 returnc1405 to be gonea1425 recede1450 roomc1450 to come offc1475 to take one's licence1475 issue1484 walka1500 to go adieua1522 pikea1529 avaunt1549 trudge1562 vade?1570 discoast1571 leave1593 wag1594 to go off1600 troop1600 hence1614 to set on one's foota1616 to pull up one's stumps1647 quit1811 to clear out1816 slope1830 to walk one's chalks1835 shove1844 to roll out1850 to pull out1855 to light out1859 to take a run-out powder1909 to push off (also along)1923 1855 W. G. Simms Forayers xxiii. 257 Two or three of you, must scout day and night..till you find the coast is clear—then put in and pull out. 1880 ‘M. Twain’ Tramp Abroad xxviii. 287 We got under way..and pulled out for the summit again, with a fresh and vigorous step. 1910 C. E. Mulford Hopalong Cassidy xi. 73 I reckon you better pull out—you ain't needed around here. 1920 J. M. Hunter Trail Drivers of Texas I. 98 At this I..rounded up my ‘crow bait’ and pulled out for home. 1953 L. Morton Fall Philippines viii. 135 The next morning, with the Japanese advancing from all sides, Horan pulled out. 1957 R. Lawler Summer of Seventeenth Doll iii The mob is pullin' out on Monday—up the Murray for the grapes. 1966 P. St. Pierre Breaking Smith's Quarter Horse 44 She went back in the mountains with him and they had a baby there and the baby died of pneumonia or something, and she pulled out. 1977 H. O'Hagan Woman who got on at Jasper Station 43 ‘You fellows figuring on pulling out?’... Pete, gaining his feet, said, ‘No, we're just going to sit here and watch the grass grow.’ 2005 J. Pluss Jumping Fences iii. 555 Look at my goddamned leg! No time to fool with it here! Let's pull out! c. Originally U.S. To withdraw from an undertaking, activity, etc.; to back out of a commitment or enterprise. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > decision > irresolution or vacillation > reversal of or forsaking one's will or purpose > reverse or abandon one's purpose [verb (intransitive)] > withdraw from an engagement or promise starta1450 fang1522 recidivate1528 to draw back1572 flinch1578 to shrink collar1579 retract1616 to shrink out of the collar1636 renege1651 to fly off1667 to slip (the) collarc1677 to declare off1749 to cry off1775 to back out1807 to fight off1833 crawfish1848 welsh1871 to pull out1884 the world > action or operation > inaction > not doing > abstaining or refraining from action > abstain or refrain from action [verb (intransitive)] > avoid > withdraw (from a task or undertaking) vacate1665 retire1807 to pull out1884 to bow out1942 1884 Missouri Republican 24 Feb. in J. S. Farmer Americanisms (1889) He knows that if he keeps his money in the..business..he will lose it all, and so he has pulled out. 1889 Daily Nevada State Jrnl. 1 Jan. One possible candidate [for the Speakership] pulled out. 1955 L. S. Amery My Polit. Life III. ii. 69 He was dithering again and might even resign if the Liberals pulled out. 2006 Los Angeles Times 17 Jan. (Sports section) 5 The International Baseball Federation has threatened to withdraw its sanctioning of the event, and Puerto Rico has said it would pull out. 5. transitive. Sport (originally and chiefly U.S.). To achieve (a victory) or win (a match) unexpectedly, in a close contest, or at the last minute. Cf. to pull (something) out of the bag at Phrases 12, to pull out of the fire at fire n. and int. Phrases 2h(a). ΚΠ 1886 Washington Post 30 Sept. 2/4 The Philadelphians by daring base running and some clever sacrifice hitting managed to pull out a victory after defeat seemed almost certain. 1940 Oakland (Calif.) Tribune 12 July 28/4 The Oaks scored another one-run victory..the third straight in which the Oaks have pulled out a win by the slim margin of a single counter. 1990 Sports Illustr. 8 Oct. 98/2 Florida State needed a couple of big defensive plays to pull out the game. 2003 Ace June 76/1 She was a set and 2–4 down against Davenport before pulling out victory with some fierce hitting. 6. intransitive. colloquial. To withdraw the penis during or after an act of sexual intercourse; spec. to do so before ejaculation with the intention of preventing conception. ΚΠ c1890 Stag Party ‘Pull out,’ she cried, ‘don't spend inside, Or I'll get into trouble.’ 1939 H. Miller Tropic of Capricorn 189 After he had almost polished the ass off her with his back-scuttling he pulled out for a second, as though to cool his cock off. 1986 J. Friedman Tales of Times Square 123 Levenson pulls out, rolls over like a fat dog, and dumps the motherload on Goldstein's pretty poster face. 2000 J. Murray But I love Him (2001) iii. 44 Neither one of us had any birth control, but he assured me that he'd pull out in time, which he didn't. 7. transitive. Sport. To take or extend (a lead or advantage). ΚΠ 1896 Boston Daily Globe 5 June 2/7 At first the Beatrice seemed to gain a little, but the Privateer soon struck a winning gait and pulled out a lead of nearly seven minutes to the buoy. 1901 Times 13 June 11/4 Creole both in the run..and in the reach showed to much better advantage,..and at the Mouse had pulled out a good lead. 1987 Road Racing Monthly July 8/5 Before those problems I'd pulled out an eight second advantage in just five laps over Eddie. 2004 Herald Express (Torquay) 15 Sept. 71 Exeter and Coalporters made the running on the re-row with Exeter pulling out a lead of three quarters of a length by half way. 8. intransitive. Of a motor vehicle: to move into a lane of traffic from the edge of the road, or from a nearside lane. Also with the driver or passengers as subject. ΘΚΠ society > travel > transport > transport or conveyance in a vehicle > movement of vehicles > move or go along [verb (intransitive)] > move away or outwards to draw away1648 to pull out1920 to pull away1955 1920 Times 4 June 5/3 He thought that the driver of the defendant's car pulled out from behind the van and made a full sweep outwards. 1938 G. Greene Brighton Rock vii. ix. 349 A bus came upon them and pulled out just in time. 1972 ‘A. York’ Expurgator i. iv. 59 He pulled out, into the middle of the road,..and saw the lorry coming at him. 2002 P. A. Huchthausen October Fury i. 23 The Volga pulled out into the Moscow traffic and swirling black diesel exhaust. 9. intransitive. a. Of an aircraft or its occupants: to emerge from a dive. ΘΚΠ society > travel > air or space travel > action of flying (in) aircraft > specific flying operations or procedures > [verb (intransitive)] > descend > suddenly and steeply > emerge from dive to pull out1942 1917 ‘Contact’ Airman's Outings 46 We swerved violently, and they pulled out of their dive well away from us.] 1942 T. Rattigan Flare Path i. 30 I put the old Wimpey into a dive and..pulled out only a few feet above his head. 1995 Daily Mail (Nexis) 22 July The Fokker went into a dive and didn't pull out. b. Surfing. To end a ride by bringing one's surfboard out of a wave. Cf. to pull off 8 at Phrasal verbs. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > water sports except racing > surfing > surf-ride [verb (intransitive)] > actions of surfer pearl-dive1923 slide1931 hot-dog1959 to hang five, ten1962 to kick out1962 to cut back1963 to pull out1963 to pull off1964 nose-ride1965 rollercoaster1969 shred1977 rail1986 to pull in1987 1963 Surfing Yearbk. 42/2 Pull out, ending a ride by getting your board out of a wave. There are many different ways of pulling out. 1964 J. Severson Mod. Surfing around World xvii. 157 You may also have the opportunity of pulling out before reaching the section. 1971 Stud. in Eng. (Univ. Cape Town) Feb. 27 This is called being locked in, because in such a condition it is virtually impossible to pull-out. 2003 Paddles Sept. 32 Teahupo requires a lot of respect when surfing it, the main problem is that it bowls back around at each end making it very difficult to pull out at the end of your ride. < as lemmas |
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