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1 put off
يُطْفِئ النّورPlease put the light off!
2) to delay; to postpone:يُؤَجِّلHe put off leaving / his departure till Thursday.
3) to cancel an arranged meeting etc with (a person):يُلْغي مُقابَلَة أو لِقاءI had to put the Browns off because I had 'flu.
4) to cause (a person) to feel disgust or dislike (for):يُنَفِّرُ، يُثير إشْمِئْزازThe conversation about illness put me off my dinner.
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2 put off
أَجَّلَ \ adjourn: (of meetings) to stop, break off, until another time. delay: to leave until later: I delayed my visit until the rain stopped. postpone: to delay (a planned event or action): The match was postponed (till next Saturday) because of rain. put off: to delay: We have put off the meeting till tomorrow. suspend: to stop or set aside for a short time, hang: I shall suspend judgement until I know all the facts. \ See Also أرجأ (أَرْجَأَ) -
3 put off
أَرْجَأَ \ adjourn: (of meetings) stop, to break off until another time. postpone: to delay (a planned event or action): The match was postponed (till next Saturday) because of rain. put off: to delay: We have put off the meeting till tomorrow. suspend: to stop or set aside for a short time, hang: I shall suspend judgement until I know all the facts. An electric light was suspended on a wire over the entrance. \ See Also أجل (أَجَّل) -
4 be postponed, deferred or put off
تأجَّل \ be postponed, deferred or put off. -
5 put up with
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6 off, out
اِنْطَفَأَ \ go: (of fire, lamps, things that work by electricity, etc.) to become or be put off, out, for various meanings: Suddenly all the lights went out. go out: (of a fire, light, etc.) to stop burning or shining: Without more coal, the fire will soon go out. -
7 put
أَطْفَأَ (بالنفخ) \ blow out: to put out by blowing: The wind blew out the match. extinguish: to put out (a light, a fire, etc.). put: (of lights, etc. with off, out) to cause to stop burning: Put the lights off. The firemen put the fire out (They stopped a dangerous fire). quench: to put out (a fire, a flame, etc.). -
8 put sb. off
نَفَّرَ \ put sb. off: to lessen sb.’s interest or desire or attention: The food looked nice, but its smell put me off. -
9 put sb. off
صَدَّ \ put sb. off: to lessen sb.’s interest or desire or attention: The food looked nice, but its smell put me off. repulse: to drive back (an enemy) refuse (a friendly offer). snub: to treat sb. with cold rudeness, esp. by refusing an offer or invitation: He snubbed all my attempts to be friendly. stem: to stop or lessen (a flow of water, etc.); to make progress against: 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. -
10 put
وَضَعَ حَدًّا لِـ \ draw the line: to fix a limit to what can be allowed: I don’t mind your keeping rabbits, but I draw the line at rats (I cannot allow them). break off: to stop suddenly: He broke off and looked at his watch. put: used in various special ways with a noun that is related to a verb: Put a stop to it (stop it). -
11 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) -
12 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. -
13 put (someone) off the scent
to give (a person) wrong information so that he will not find the person, thing etc he is looking for:يُعْطي مَعلومات خاطِئَهShe told the police a lie in order to throw them off the scent.
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14 put (someone) off the scent
to give (a person) wrong information so that he will not find the person, thing etc he is looking for:يُعْطي مَعلومات خاطِئَهShe told the police a lie in order to throw them off the scent.
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15 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) -
16 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) -
17 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) -
18 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. -
19 break off
وَضَعَ حَدًّا لِـ \ draw the line: to fix a limit to what can be allowed: I don’t mind your keeping rabbits, but I draw the line at rats (I cannot allow them). break off: to stop suddenly: He broke off and looked at his watch. put: used in various special ways with a noun that is related to a verb: Put a stop to it (stop it). -
20 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
См. также в других словарях:
Put-off — (?; 115), n. A shift for evasion or delay; an evasion; an excuse. L Estrange. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
put off your stride — If you put someone off their stride, you distract them and make it hard for them to do or complete a task … The small dictionary of idiomes
put off — [v] defer, delay adjourn, dally, dawdle, dillydally*, drag one’s feet*, hold off, hold over, lag*, lay over, linger, loiter, poke*, postpone, prorogue, put back, reschedule, retard, shelve, stay, suspend, tarry, trail; concepts 121,234 Ant.… … New thesaurus
put off — ► put off 1) cancel or postpone an appointment with. 2) postpone. 3) cause to feel dislike or lose enthusiasm. 4) distract. Main Entry: ↑put … English terms dictionary
put off — index adjourn, delay, deter, hold up (delay), pause, postpone, pretermit, procrastinate … Law dictionary
put off a decision — index doubt (hesitate) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
put off the scent — index misdirect Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
put off the track — index divert, obfuscate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
put off to a future time — index hold up (delay) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
put off — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms put off : present tense I/you/we/they put off he/she/it puts off present participle putting off past tense put off past participle put off 1) to make someone not want to do something, or to make someone not… … English dictionary
put off — verb 1. hold back to a later time (Freq. 1) let s postpone the exam • Syn: ↑postpone, ↑prorogue, ↑hold over, ↑put over, ↑table, ↑shelve, ↑ … Useful english dictionary