put out (infinitivo to put out, tria singulara persono puts out, simpla pasinta put out, pasiva participo put out, aktiva participo putting out)
- forĵeti
- produkti
 | Samsencaĵoj |
- transitive To place outside or eject.
- Don’t forget to put out the cat.
- transitive To produce.
- The factory puts out 4000 units each day.
- transitive To injure a part of the body, especially a joint.
- Don’t put out your back trying to lift that.
- Be careful with those scissors, or you'll put your eye out!
- transitive To extinguish (a flame or light).
- They worked for days to put out the brushfire.
- 1898, J. Meade Falkner, Moonfleet Chapter 3
- When I saw the coffin I knew that I was respited, for, as I judged, there was space between it and the wall behind enough to contain my little carcass; and in a second I had put out the candle, scrambled up the shelves, half-stunned my senses with dashing my head against the roof, and squeezed my body betwixt wall and coffin.
- transitive To eliminate from a competition.
- slang ; intransitive To consent to sex.
- 1991, R S Perinbanayagam, Discursive Acts
- He had been going out with this girl — I think her name was Karol — for a couple of months... and she wouldn't put out for him... kept on saying no.
- 2005, William Heffernan, A Time Gone By
- This Grosso dated this woman a couple of times, and then, when she wouldn't put out for him, he beat her up and forced her.
- baseball To cause a player on the offense to be out, especially of men on base.
- cricket To cause a batsman (a player on the batting team) to be dismissed or out.
- To sail away, to depart.
- about 1900, O. Henry, The Missing Chord
- Along about Tuesday Uncle Cal put out for San Antone on the last wagonload of wool.
- The object in all transitive senses can come before or after the particle. If it is a pronoun, then it must come before the particle.