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1 put on
لَبِسَ \ clothe: to dress; put clothes on or supply clothes for: A man must feed and clothe his family. She was clothed in black. put on: (the opposite of take off) to dress oneself in: Put your hat and coat on. dress: to put on one’s clothes. have sth. on: to wear sth: What did she have on (or What had she got on)? She had a fur coat on. wear: to have on the body: He wore a shirt and trousers. \ See Also ألبس (أَلْبَسَ)، كسا (كَسَا)، ارتدى (ارْتَدَى) -
2 put on
ارْتَدَى \ dress: to put on one’s clothes. have sth. on: to wear sth: What did she have on (or What had she got on)? She had a fur coat on. put on: (the opposite of take off) to dress oneself in: Put your hat and coat on. wear: to have on the body: He wore a shirt and trousers. wore: p.t. of [b]wear. -
3 cross off
شَطَبَ \ cancel: to cross out sth. written. cross off: to take sth. off a list, by marking it: My name has been crossed off. cross out: to draw a line through sth.: Cross out that sentence and start again. delete: to strike out or remove (sth. written): Why has your name been deleted from the list of students?. scratch: to strike out one’s own name from a list of competitors; to say that one cannot play: We had to scratch (the match) because half our team were ill. strike: (with off or out) to put a line through a name or word, because it is no longer wanted: They struck his name off the list. Strike out any word that is wrong. \ See Also لغى (لَغَى) -
4 kill off
اِسْتَأْصَلَ \ eliminate: to remove or take out: Doctors try to eliminate all diseases. The body eliminates waste matter. eradicate: to destroy completely or put an end to (sth. bad): We must try to eradicate crime in the cities. exterminate: to destroy completely sth. (rats, disease, etc.) that is harmful. kill off: to kill till few or none remain: The icy weather killed off my roses. stamp out: to put an end to (sth. dangerous or evil): We must stamp out this disease before it spreads. \ See Also أَبَادَ، اقتلع (اِقْتَلَعَ)، ألغى (أَلْغَى)، قَضَى على -
5 have sth. on
لَبِسَ \ clothe: to dress; put clothes on or supply clothes for: A man must feed and clothe his family. She was clothed in black. put on: (the opposite of take off) to dress oneself in: Put your hat and coat on. dress: to put on one’s clothes. have sth. on: to wear sth: What did she have on (or What had she got on)? She had a fur coat on. wear: to have on the body: He wore a shirt and trousers. \ See Also ألبس (أَلْبَسَ)، كسا (كَسَا)، ارتدى (ارْتَدَى) -
6 take off
ارْتَدَى \ dress: to put on one’s clothes. have sth. on: to wear sth: What did she have on (or What had she got on)? She had a fur coat on. put on: (the opposite of take off) to dress oneself in: Put your hat and coat on. wear: to have on the body: He wore a shirt and trousers. wore: p.t. of [b]wear. -
7 have sth. on
ارْتَدَى \ dress: to put on one’s clothes. have sth. on: to wear sth: What did she have on (or What had she got on)? She had a fur coat on. put on: (the opposite of take off) to dress oneself in: Put your hat and coat on. wear: to have on the body: He wore a shirt and trousers. wore: p.t. of [b]wear. -
8 call off
أَلْغَى \ abolish: to bring to an end; stop (a custom, rule, etc.): Those laws should be abolished. call off: to give orders or decide to stop sth. which has been arranged: The meeting was called off. cancel: to stop sth. that was planned: The match was cancelled because of rain. do away with: to put an end to (sth. old and useless): Such customs should be done away with. nullify: to make of no use or value: If you drink alcohol, it will nullify the effects of your medicine. repeal: to end the effect of (a law). revoke: to take back (an official order, decision, etc.). -
9 call off
أَوْقَفَ \ arrest: to put a stop to: Can doctors arrest the progress of this disease?. bar: to forbid; prevent: He was barred from taking part in the game. call off: to give orders or decide to stop sth. which has been arranged: The meeting was called off.. close: to (cause to) be out of use: On his death, his business had to be closed (or closed down). cut off: to stop: Our electricity supply was cut off till we paid the bill. interrupt: to stop; prevent for a short time: The electricity supply was interrupted by the storm. stem: to stop or lessen (a flow of water, etc.): You must first stem the flow of blood from the wound. The motorboat was not powerful enough to stem the sudden rush of water down the stream. stop: to put an end to (movement or progress): I stopped my car and got out. Rain stopped the match after ten minutes. shut off: to stop a supply: The water was shut off because the pipe burst. suspend: to stop or set aside for a short time, hang: I shall suspend judgement until I know all the facts. \ See Also منع (مَنَعَ) -
10 cut off
أَوْقَفَ \ arrest: to put a stop to: Can doctors arrest the progress of this disease?. bar: to forbid; prevent: He was barred from taking part in the game. call off: to give orders or decide to stop sth. which has been arranged: The meeting was called off.. close: to (cause to) be out of use: On his death, his business had to be closed (or closed down). cut off: to stop: Our electricity supply was cut off till we paid the bill. interrupt: to stop; prevent for a short time: The electricity supply was interrupted by the storm. stem: to stop or lessen (a flow of water, etc.): You must first stem the flow of blood from the wound. The motorboat was not powerful enough to stem the sudden rush of water down the stream. stop: to put an end to (movement or progress): I stopped my car and got out. Rain stopped the match after ten minutes. shut off: to stop a supply: The water was shut off because the pipe burst. suspend: to stop or set aside for a short time, hang: I shall suspend judgement until I know all the facts. \ See Also منع (مَنَعَ) -
11 shut off
أَوْقَفَ \ arrest: to put a stop to: Can doctors arrest the progress of this disease?. bar: to forbid; prevent: He was barred from taking part in the game. call off: to give orders or decide to stop sth. which has been arranged: The meeting was called off.. close: to (cause to) be out of use: On his death, his business had to be closed (or closed down). cut off: to stop: Our electricity supply was cut off till we paid the bill. interrupt: to stop; prevent for a short time: The electricity supply was interrupted by the storm. stem: to stop or lessen (a flow of water, etc.): You must first stem the flow of blood from the wound. The motorboat was not powerful enough to stem the sudden rush of water down the stream. stop: to put an end to (movement or progress): I stopped my car and got out. Rain stopped the match after ten minutes. shut off: to stop a supply: The water was shut off because the pipe burst. suspend: to stop or set aside for a short time, hang: I shall suspend judgement until I know all the facts. \ See Also منع (مَنَعَ) -
12 kill off
قَضَى على \ kill: to cause the death of (a living creature or plant). kill off: to kill till few or none remain: The icy weather killed off my roses. stamp out: to put an end to (sth. dangerous or evil): We must stamp out this disease before it spreads. swallow up: to cause (sth.) to disappear: His family’s needs swallow up all his earnings. -
13 abbringen
v/t (unreg., trennb., hat -ge-)1. jemanden von etw. abbringen fig. put s.o. off doing s.th., Person: auch talk s.o. out of ( oder dissuade s.o. from) doing s.th.; ich habe versucht, sie davon abzubringen I tried to talk her out of it; jemanden von einer Gewohnheit abbringen break s.o. of a habit, break s.o.’s habit; jemanden von einem Thema abbringen get s.o. off a subject; jemanden vom ( rechten) Wege abbringen lead s.o. astray; der Wind hat uns vom Kurs abgebracht the wind put us off course2. umg. (abmachen können) get off; er brachte den Deckel nicht ab he couldn’t get ( oder take) the lid off allg.* * *das Abbringendissuasion* * *ạb|brin|genvt sep1)jdn von etw abbringen — to make sb change his/her mind about sth
sich von etw abbringen lassen — to allow oneself to be put off sth (Brit), to be dissuaded from sth
ich lasse mich von meiner Meinung nicht abbringen — you won't get me to change my mind, nothing will make me change my mind
jdn vom Thema abbringen — to get sb off the subject
jdn/einen Hund von der Spur abbringen — to throw or put sb/a dog off the scent
jdn/etw vom Kurs abbringen — to throw or put sb/sth off course
2) (esp S Ger inf) Deckel etc to get off* * *ab|brin·gen▪ jdn davon \abbringen, etw zu tun to prevent sb [from] doing sth; (abraten) to dissuade sb from doing sthjdn vom Kurs \abbringen to throw sb off coursejdn vom Thema \abbringen to get sb away from the subjectsich akk von etw dat nicht \abbringen lassen to not let oneself be made [or persuaded] to give up sthsich akk nicht von seiner Meinung \abbringen lassen to not let anyone/anything change one's mind [or opinion]er ließ sich von seinem Vorhaben nicht \abbringen he wouldn't be persuaded to drop his planjdn/einen Hund von der Spur \abbringen to throw [or put] sb/a dog off the scent* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verbjemanden davon abbringen, etwas zu tun — stop somebody doing something; (durch Worte) dissuade somebody from doing something
* * *abbringen v/t (irr, trennb, hat -ge-)1.jemanden von etwas abbringen fig put sb off doing sth, Person: auch talk sb out of ( oder dissuade sb from) doing sth;ich habe versucht, sie davon abzubringen I tried to talk her out of it;jemanden von einer Gewohnheit abbringen break sb of a habit, break sb’s habit;jemanden von einem Thema abbringen get sb off a subject;jemanden vom (rechten) Wege abbringen lead sb astray;der Wind hat uns vom Kurs abgebracht the wind put us off course2. umg (abmachen können) get off;* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verbjemanden davon abbringen, etwas zu tun — stop somebody doing something; (durch Worte) dissuade somebody from doing something
* * *v.to dissuade v.to wring v.(§ p.,p.p.: wrung) -
14 verschieben
(unreg.)I v/t1. (Schrank etc.) shift, move; EDV relocate, shift; EISENB. shunt, Am. auch switch; (Truppen) displace; Perspektive: alter, change2. zeitlich: put off, postpone ( auf + Akk to, until, till); auf unbestimmte Zeit verschieben put s.th. off indefinitelyII v/refl1. move; (verrutschen) slip; Knochenbruch etc.: become displaced; Gleichgewicht, Kräfteverhältnis etc.: shift2. Termin etc.: be postponed ( auf + Akk to, until, till); dadurch verschieben sich die nachfolgenden Termine for this reason the subsequent deadlines will be postponed ( oder pushed back)* * *(Möbel) to move; to shift; to displace;(Termin) to postpone; to adjourn; to defer; to suspend; to put back; to put off* * *ver|schie|ben ptp verschoben [fɛɐ'ʃoːbn] irreg1. vt1) (= verrücken) to move (AUCH COMPUT), to shift; Truppen to displace; (RAIL ) Eisenbahnwagen to shunt; Perspektive to alter, to shift2) (= aufschieben) to change; (auf später) to postpone, to put off, to defer (um for)3) (inf) Waren, Devisen to traffic in2. vr1) (= verrutschen) to move out of place; (fig Perspektive, Schwerpunkt) to alter, to shift2) (zeitlich) to be postponed, to be put off or deferred4) (LING Laute) to shift* * *1) (to put off to another time: They can defer their departure.) defer2) (to put off to another time: We have delayed publication of the book till the spring.) delay3) (to cancel until a future time: The football match has been postponed (till tomorrow).) postpone4) (to change (the) position or direction (of): We spent the whole evening shifting furniture around; The wind shifted to the west overnight.) shift* * *ver·schie·ben *I. vt1. (verrücken)2. (verlegen)▪ etw [irgendwohin] \verschieben to smuggle sth [somewhere]II. vr* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) shift; move2) (aufschieben) put off, postpone (auf + Akk. till)2.1) get out of place; (rutschen) slip2) (erst später stattfinden) be postponed (um for)* * *verschieben (irr)A. v/t1. (Schrank etc) shift, move; IT relocate, shift; BAHN shunt, US auch switch; (Truppen) displace; Perspektive: alter, change2. zeitlich: put off, postpone (auf +akk to, until, till);auf unbestimmte Zeit verschieben put sth off indefinitelyDevisen ins Ausland verschieben smuggle currency abroadB. v/r1. move; (verrutschen) slip; Knochenbruch etc: become displaced; Gleichgewicht, Kräfteverhältnis etc: shift2. Termin etc: be postponed (auf +akk to, until, till);dadurch verschieben sich die nachfolgenden Termine for this reason the subsequent deadlines will be postponed ( oder pushed back)* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) shift; move2) (aufschieben) put off, postpone (auf + Akk. till)2.1) get out of place; (rutschen) slip2) (erst später stattfinden) be postponed (um for)* * *n.relocating n. -
15 schieben
to push; to shunt; to shove* * *schie|ben ['ʃiːbn] pret schob [ʃoːp] ptp geschoben [gə'ʃoːbn]1. vt1) (= bewegen) to push, to shove; Fahrrad, Rollstuhl etc to push, to wheel; Auto to push; (in den Ofen) to putschíében (fig) — to put sth aside; Schuld, Verantwortung to reject sth
her schíében (fig) — to put off sth
etw von einem Tag auf den andern schíében — to put sth off from one day to the next
etw auf jdn/etw schíében — to blame sb/sth for sth, to put the blame onto sb/sth
die Schuld auf jdn schíében — to put the blame on sb
die Verantwortung auf jdn schíében — to put the responsibility at sb's door
See:2) (= stecken) to put; Hände to slip, to putjdm/sich etw in den Mund schíében — to put sth into sb's/one's mouth
4) (inf)Dienst/Wache schíében — to do duty/guard duty
See:2. vi1) (= drücken, schubsen) to push, to shove2) (inf)mit etw schíében — to traffic in sth
mit Drogen schíében — to push drugs (inf)
3) (inf = begünstigen) to wangle (inf)3. vr1) (mit Anstrengung) to push, to shovesich an die Spitze schíében — to push one's way to the front
2) (= sich bewegen) to move* * *1) (to move or push little by little: He edged his chair nearer to her; She edged her way through the crowd.) edge2) (to thrust; to push: I shoved the papers into a drawer; I'm sorry I bumped into you - somebody shoved me; Stop shoving!; He shoved (his way) through the crowd.) shove3) (to cause to move on wheels: He wheeled his bicycle along the path.) wheel* * *schie·ben<schob, geschoben>[ˈʃi:bn̩]I. vt▪ etw [irgendwohin] \schieben to push sth [somewhere]er schob den Einkaufswagen durch den Supermarkt he wheeled the shopping trolley through the supermarket2. (rücken)lass uns den Schrank in die Ecke \schieben let's shift the cupboard into the corner3. (antreiben)▪ jdn \schieben to push sb4. (stecken)die Pizza in den Ofen \schieben to stick [or shove] the pizza into the oven fam5. (zuweisen)▪ etw auf jdn \schieben to lay [or put] [or place] sth on sbdie Schuld auf jdn \schieben to lay the blame on sb [or at sb's door]die Verantwortung auf jdn \schieben to place [or put] the responsibility on sb['s shoulders]sie schob ihre Müdigkeit aufs Wetter she put her tiredness down to the weather6. (abweisen)7. (sl)Kohldampf \schieben to be starving figeine ruhige Kugel \schieben to take it easyeine Nummer \schieben to get laid slRauschgift \schieben to traffic in drugseine Schicht \schieben to work a shiftWache \schieben to be on sentry duty [or guardII. vi1. (vorwärtsrollen) to pushmit Zigaretten/Drogen \schieben to traffic cigarettes/drugsIII. vr* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) push; push, wheel <bicycle, pram, shopping trolley>; (drängen) push; shove2) (stecken) put; (gleiten lassen) slip3)etwas auf jemanden/etwas schieben — blame somebody/something for something
2.die Schuld/die Verantwortung auf jemanden schieben — put the blame on somebody or lay the blame at somebody's door/lay the responsibility at somebody's door
2) (sich bewegen) move3.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) push; (heftig) push; shove3) (ugs.): (mit etwas handeln)4) (Skat) shove* * *schieben; schiebt, schob, hat geschobenA. v/t & v/iwir mussten das Auto schieben we had to push the car ( oder give the car a push);kannst du mal schieben? will you have a push?, can you push for a bit?;in der Fußgängerzone müssen Radfahrer schieben cyclists must dismount in the pedestrian precinct (US zone);den Riegel vor die Tür schieben bolt the door;den Kuchen in den Ofen schieben put the cake in the oven;den Ball ins Tor schieben slide the ball into the net;(eine Arbeit etc)von einem Tag auf den anderen schieben put off (work etc) from one day to the next;ihn muss man immer erst schieben umg, fig he always needs a push ( stärker: kick in the backside); → Bank1 1, Kugel, Wache etc3. umg (handeln):Devisen schieben wheel and deal in currency4. fig (beschuldigen):etwas auf jemanden schieben (try to) blame sb for sth;5. fig:etwas (weit) von sich schieben deny all responsibility for sthB. v/r:sich nach vorn schieben push (one’s way) to the front; SPORT im Rennen: move up (through the field);sich durch die Menge schieben push one’s way through the crowd;Wolken schoben sich vor die Sonne clouds covered (up) the sun* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) push; push, wheel <bicycle, pram, shopping trolley>; (drängen) push; shove2) (stecken) put; (gleiten lassen) slip3)etwas auf jemanden/etwas schieben — blame somebody/something for something
2.die Schuld/die Verantwortung auf jemanden schieben — put the blame on somebody or lay the blame at somebody's door/lay the responsibility at somebody's door
2) (sich bewegen) move3.unregelmäßiges intransitives Verb1) push; (heftig) push; shove3) (ugs.): (mit etwas handeln)4) (Skat) shove* * *v.(§ p.,pp.: schob, geschoben)= to edge (on) v.to push v.to shove v.to shuffle v.to slide v.(§ p.,p.p.: slid)to thrust v.(§ p.,p.p.: thrust) -
16 aufschieben
v/t (unreg., trennb., hat -ge-)2. fig. postpone, put off; defer förm. (auf, bis until, till); (verzögern) delay; auf einen anderen Tag: adjourn; er schiebt es immer wieder auf he keeps putting it off; aufgeschoben ist nicht aufgehoben we’ll make up for it (another time)* * *(verschieben) to postpone; to delay; to put off; to defer; to suspend;(öffnen) to push open* * *auf|schie|benvt sepFenster, Tür to slide open; Riegel to push or slide back; (fig = verschieben) to put offaufgeschoben ist nicht aufgehoben (prov) — putting something off doesn't mean it won't happen
* * *1) (to delay; to postpone: He put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.) put off2) (to put aside, usually for consideration, completion etc later: The project has been shelved for the moment.) shelve* * *auf|schie·ben1. (durch Schieben öffnen)einen Riegel \aufschieben to push [or slide] back a bolt sep3.* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) (verschieben) postpone; put offaufgeschoben ist nicht aufgehoben — there'll be another opportunity; there is always another time
2) slide open <door, window>; slide or draw back < bolt>* * *aufschieben v/t (irr, trennb, hat -ge-)2. fig postpone, put off; defer form (er schiebt es immer wieder auf he keeps putting it off;aufgeschoben ist nicht aufgehoben we’ll make up for it (another time)* * *unregelmäßiges transitives Verb1) (verschieben) postpone; put offaufgeschoben ist nicht aufgehoben — there'll be another opportunity; there is always another time
2) slide open <door, window>; slide or draw back < bolt>* * *v.to adjourn v.to defer v.to delay v.to put off v.to shelve v.to suspend v. -
17 hinauszögern
(trennb., hat -ge-)II v/refl be delayed, take longer than expected* * *to procrastinate* * *hi|naus|zö|gern sep1. vtto delay, to put off2. vrto be delayed, to be put off* * *hi·naus|zö·gern* * *1.transitives Verb delay; put off2.reflexives Verb be delayed; be put off* * *hinauszögern (trennb, hat -ge-)B. v/r be delayed, take longer than expected* * *1.transitives Verb delay; put off2.reflexives Verb be delayed; be put off -
18 późn|o
Ⅰ adv. grad. [obudzić się, wracać, kłaść się] late- jest już późno, chodźmy spać it’s late, let’s go to bed- „jest już północ” – „aż tak późno?” ‘it’s midnight’ – ‘(is it) as late as that?’- pośpiesz się, robi się późno hurry up, it’s getting late- jest później niż sądziłem it’s later than I thought- późno po południu/wieczorem late in the afternoon/in the evening- do domu wrócił późno w nocy he came home late at night- późno chodził spać/wstawał he kept late hours/was a late riser- lubiła późno wstawać she liked sleeping in a. getting up late- obudził się później niż zwykle he woke up later than usual- późno jadłem śniadanie I had a late breakfast- późno się ożenił he married late (in life)- ona wychodzi do pracy najpóźniej ze wszystkich she’s the last to leave for work- Wielkanoc wypada w tym roku późno Easter is late this year- spektakl zaczyna się późno the show doesn’t start till late- zebranie zaczęło się później niż planowano the meeting began later than planned- za a. zbyt późno too late- teraz za późno na żale it’s too late to be sorry- przybył na miejsce o pięć minut za późno he arrived five minutes too late- trochę za późno, żeby zmieniać zdanie it’s a bit late in the day a. in the game US to change your/my mind- jeszcze nie jest za późno, żeby z nią porozmawiać it isn’t too late to talk to herⅡ później adv. comp. later (on), afterwards GB, afterward US, then- dwa lata/trzy tygodnie później two years/three weeks later- tydzień/rok później the following week/year, a week/a year later- później tego samego dnia later that day- najpierw lekcje, później zabawa first your homework, and then you can play- powiem ci później I’ll tell you later a. afterwards- później tego żałowałem I regretted it later a. afterwards- wrócę nie później niż o 6 wieczorem/we wtorek I’ll be back not a. no later than (at) 6 p.m./on Tuesday- odłożyć coś na później (pracę, zadanie) to put off sth a. put sth off until a. till later- odłożył lekcje na później he put off doing his homework- nie odkładaj tego na później don’t put it off until later- zostawię sobie to ciastko na później I’ll leave this cake for laterⅢ najpóźniej part. [wyjechać, oddać] at the latest- wrócę w czwartek, najpóźniej w piątek I’ll be back on Thursday, Friday at the latest- najpóźniej do dziesiątego by the tenth at the (very) latest- jak najpóźniej as late as possibleⅣ do późna adv. till late- pracować do późna/do późna w nocy to work late/late into the nightⅤ późno- w wyrazach złożonych late-- kościół późnogotycki/późnoromański a late-Gothic/-Romanesque church- późnowiosenne przymrozki late spring frosts- długie późnozimowe wieczory long nights in late winter■ prędzej a. wcześniej czy później sooner or later- kto późno przychodzi, (ten) sam sobie szkodzi przysł. ≈ latecomers lose out, first come, first servedThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > późn|o
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19 verschieben
ver·schie·ben * irreg vt1) ( verrücken)etw [um etw] \verschieben to move [or shift] sth [by sth]2) ( verlegen)3) ( illegal exportieren)etw [irgendwohin] \verschieben to smuggle sth [somewhere]vr1) ( später stattfinden)2) ( verrutschen)sich \verschieben to slip -
20 aufschieben
auf|schie·ben1) ( durch Schieben öffnen)etw \aufschieben to slide open sth sep;2) ( verschieben)WENDUNGEN:
См. также в других словарях:
put sb/sth through their paces — ► to make someone show you their skills and knowledge, or to test how well something works: »As the machines come off the assembly line, a team of quality controllers puts them through their paces. »The interview panel will put all candidates… … Financial and business terms
put — W1S1 [put] v past tense and past participle put present participle putting [T] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(move to place)¦ 2¦(change somebody s situation/feelings)¦ 3¦(write/print something)¦ 4¦(express)¦ 5 put a stop/an end to something 6 put something into… … Dictionary of contemporary English
put somebody off something — ˌput sb ˈoff sth/sb derived to make sb lose interest in or enthusiasm for sth/sb • He was put off science by bad teaching. • put somebody off something doing sth The accident put her off driving for life. Main entry: ↑putderived … Useful english dictionary
put somebody off somebody — ˌput sb ˈoff sth/sb derived to make sb lose interest in or enthusiasm for sth/sb • He was put off science by bad teaching. • put somebody off somebody doing sth The accident put her off driving for life. Main entry: ↑putderived … Useful english dictionary
off-putting — off .putting adj BrE if someone s behaviour or the appearance of something is off putting, you do not like it or you think it is unattractive ▪ Some women found the competitive style of the discussions off putting. >off puttingly adv →put… … Dictionary of contemporary English
put sth through their paces — put sb/sth through their paces ► to make someone show you their skills and knowledge, or to test how well something works: »As the machines come off the assembly line, a team of quality controllers puts them through their paces. »The interview… … Financial and business terms
put sb through their paces — put sb/sth through their paces ► to make someone show you their skills and knowledge, or to test how well something works: »As the machines come off the assembly line, a team of quality controllers puts them through their paces. »The interview… … Financial and business terms
put — verb past tense putpresent participle putting MOVE STH 1 (transitive always + adv/prep) to move something from one place or position into another, especially using your hands: put sth in/on/there etc: Put those bags on the table. | You should put … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
put — verb past tense putpresent participle putting MOVE STH 1 (transitive always + adv/prep) to move something from one place or position into another, especially using your hands: put sth in/on/there etc: Put those bags on the table. | You should put … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
put*/*/*/ — [pʊt] (past tense past participle put) verb [T] 1) to move something to a particular position using your hands Where did you put the newspaper?[/ex] Did I put my wallet in your bag?[/ex] She put her hand on Cliff s arm.[/ex] 2) to cause someone… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
put something off — POSTPONE, defer, delay, put back, adjourn, hold over, reschedule, shelve, table; informal put on ice, put on the back burner. → put * * * postpone something they can t put off a decision much longer * * * ˌput sthˈoff derived to change sth to a… … Useful english dictionary