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Put out   /pʊt aʊt/   Listen
Put out

verb
1.
To cause inconvenience or discomfort to.  Synonyms: bother, discommode, disoblige, incommode, inconvenience, trouble.
2.
Put out considerable effort.
3.
Deprive of the oxygen necessary for combustion.  Synonym: smother.
4.
Thrust or extend out.  Synonyms: exsert, extend, hold out, stretch forth, stretch out.  "Point a finger" , "Extend a hand" , "The bee exserted its sting"
5.
Put out, as of a candle or a light.  Synonym: douse.
6.
Be sexually active.
7.
Cause to be out on a fielding play.  Synonym: retire.
8.
Retire.
9.
Prepare and issue for public distribution or sale.  Synonyms: bring out, issue, publish, release.
10.
Administer an anesthetic drug to.  Synonyms: anaesthetise, anaesthetize, anesthetise, anesthetize, put under.  "Anesthetize the gum before extracting the teeth"



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"Put out" Quotes from Famous Books



... airily, and stepped up close to her, to lift her by the elbows to her saddle. She put out a foot clad in a very pretty, neat shoe. She evidently expected Keith to let her step into his hand. He knew of this mode of helping a lady up, but he had never tried it. And, though he stooped and held his hand as if quite accustomed to it, ...
— Gordon Keith • Thomas Nelson Page

... with worthless paper. These were known as the "Wild Cat Banks." Silver coin being very scarce, and the banks not being allowed to issue notes for a smaller amount than one dollar, several persons put out notes from 6 to 75 cents in value; these were called "Shinplasters." The Shinplaster was in the shape of a promissory note, made payable on demand. I have often seen persons with large rolls of these bills, the whole not amounting to more than five dollars. Some weeks after I had commenced ...
— Three Years in Europe - Places I Have Seen and People I Have Met • William Wells Brown

... replied Steger, ingratiatingly. "He asked me to step around and see what you wanted him to do in the matter. Judge Payderson has just fixed the sentence time for Monday morning at ten o'clock. I don't suppose you'll be much put out if he doesn't show up here before Monday at eight o'clock, will you, or Sunday night, anyhow? He's perfectly reliable, as you know." Steger was sounding Jaspers out, politely trying to make the time of Cowperwood's arrival a trivial matter in order to avoid paying ...
— The Financier • Theodore Dreiser

... said he; "but it won't work. I know you are put out, in spite of the tunefulness of your soul. But wait for my second twist. You'll wish you'd struck a cyclone instead when ...
— Ghosts I have Met and Some Others • John Kendrick Bangs

... better kinds, and such variety for pulchritude and sweetness; that when by some princely example, our late pride, effeminacy, and luxury, (which has to our vast charges, excluded all the ornaments of timber, &c. to give place to hangings, embroideries, and foreign leather) shall be put out of countenance, we may hope to see a new face of things, for the encouragement of planters (the more immediate work of God's hands) and the natural, wholesome, and ancient use of timber, for the more lasting occasions, and furniture of our dwellings: And though ...
— Sylva, Vol. 1 (of 2) - Or A Discourse of Forest Trees • John Evelyn


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