put
verb /pʊt/
/pʊt/
Verb Forms
Idioms Phrasal Verbspresent simple I / you / we / they put | /pʊt/ /pʊt/ |
he / she / it puts | /pʊts/ /pʊts/ |
past simple put | /pʊt/ /pʊt/ |
past participle put | /pʊt/ /pʊt/ |
-ing form putting | /ˈpʊtɪŋ/ /ˈpʊtɪŋ/ |
- Put the cases down there, please.
- Did you put sugar in my coffee?
- Put your hand up if you need more paper.
- put something + adv./prep. to move something into a particular place or position using force
- He put his fist through a glass door.
- Her family put her into a nursing home.
- It was the year the Americans put a man on the moon.
- We had to put new locks on all the doors.
Extra Examples- We're not allowed to put posters on the walls.
- Can you help me put the roof rack on the car?
- Put your name here.
- Friday at 11? I'll put it in my diary.
- I couldn't read what she had put.
- I was put in charge of the office.
- The incident put her in a bad mood.
- Put yourself in my position. What would you have done?
- I tried to put the matter into perspective.
- Don't go putting yourself at risk.
- I am determined to put things right.
- It was time to put their suggestion into practice.
- This new injury will put him out of action for several weeks.
- He put Ray on guard with a gun.
- Her new job has put a great strain on her.
- They put pressure on her to resign.
- It's time you put a stop to this childish behaviour.
- She put it very tactfully.
- Put simply, we accept their offer or go bankrupt.
- Simply put, the film is a masterpiece.
- I was, to put it mildly, annoyed (= I was extremely angry).
- Putting it bluntly, the project was a disaster.
- He was too trusting—or, to put it another way, he had no head for business.
- The meat was—how shall I put it?—a little overdone.
- As T.S. Eliot puts it…
- She had never tried to put this feeling into words.
- Can you help me put this letter into good English, please?
- I thought you put your points very well.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- cleverly
- eloquently
- well
- …
- to put it another way
- put something on something to give or attach a particular level of importance, trust, value, etc. to something
- Our company puts the emphasis on quality.
- He put a limit on the amount we could spend.
- put somebody/something + adv./prep. to consider somebody/something to belong to the class or level mentioned
- I'd put her in the top rank of modern novelists.
- put something to throw the shot
in place/position
attach
write
into state/condition
affect somebody/something
express
give value/rank
in sport
Word OriginOld English (recorded only in the verbal noun putung), of unknown origin; compare with dialect pote ‘to push, thrust’ (an early sense of the verb put).
Idioms Most idioms containing put are at the entries for the nouns and adjectives in the idioms, for example put your foot in it is at foot.
I wouldn’t put it past somebody (to do something)
- (informal) used to say that you think somebody is capable of doing something wrong, illegal, etc.
put it about
- (British English, informal) to have many sexual partners
put it to somebody that…
- to suggest something to somebody to see if they can argue against it
- I put it to you that you are the only person who had a motive for the crime.
put one over on somebody
- (informal) to persuade somebody to believe something that is not true
- Don't try to put one over on me!
put somebody through it
- (especially British English, informal) to force somebody to experience something difficult or unpleasant
- They really put me through it (= asked me difficult questions) at the interview.
put together
- used when comparing or contrasting somebody/something with a group of other people or things to mean ‘combined’ or ‘in total’
- Your department spent more last year than all the others put together.
put up or shut up
- (especially British English) used to tell somebody to stop just talking about something and actually do it, show it, etc.