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1 put out of aim
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2 put out of breath
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3 put out of focus
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4 put out of kilter
put out of kilter*expr.• estar estropeado expr. -
5 put out of order
v.• desajustar v.• desarreglar v.• descomponer v.• desconcertar v.• desordenar v. -
6 put out of plumb
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7 put out of tune
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8 put out one's feelers
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9 put out to dry
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10 put out to graze
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11 put out
1) (to extend (a hand etc): He put out his hand to steady her.) tender (la mano a alguien)2) ((of plants etc) to produce (shoots, leaves etc).) echar3) (to extinguish (a fire, light etc): The fire brigade soon put out the fire.) apagar4) (to issue, give out: They put out a distress call.) emitir, lanzar5) (to cause bother or trouble to: Don't put yourself out for my sake!) molestarse (por)6) (to annoy: I was put out by his decision.) molestarseput out vb apagarput out vtinconvenience: importunar, incomodarv.• sofocar v.
1.
1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( put outside) \<\<washing/cat\>\> sacar*b) ( set out) disponer*, colocar*c) ( extend) \<\<arm/tongue\>\> sacar*she put out her hand — tendió or alargó la mano
d) ( dislocate) dislocarse*, zafarse (Chi, Méx)2)a) ( extinguish) \<\<fire/light/cigarette\>\> apagar*b) ( anesthetize) (colloq) dormir*, anestesiarc) ( distort)the new prices have put all our estimates out — los nuevos precios significan que nuestros cálculos son ahora erróneos
d) ( in baseball) \<\<hitter/runner\>\> sacar*, poner* `out'3)a) (offend, upset) molestar, ofendershe was most put out — se molestó or se ofendió mucho
b) ( inconvenience) molestar4)a) (issue, publish) \<\<photograph/statement\>\> publicar*b) ( broadcast) transmitir5) ( pass on)the contract is being put out to tender — van a llamar a concurso or a licitación para el contrato
6) ( sprout) \<\<shoots/buds\>\> echar7) v + o + adv, v + adv + o ( expel) \<\<troublemaker\>\> echar8) v + adv ( Naut) salir*, zarparto put out to sea — hacerse* a la mar
2. adjective (pred)to be put out — estar* molesto
1. VT + ADV1) (=place outside) [+ rubbish] sacar; [+ cat] sacar fuera, dejar afuerapasture 1.he put the cat out for the night — sacó al gato a que pasara la noche fuera, dejó al gato fuera para que pasara la noche
2) (=eject) [+ squatter, tenant, troublemaker] echar, expulsar3) (=stretch out, push out) [+ hand] alargar, tender; [+ arm] alargar, extender; [+ tongue, claws, horns] sacar; [+ leaves, shoots] echarfeelerhe put out his arm to protect himself — se protegió con el brazo, puso el brazo para protegerse
4) (=lay out in order) [+ cards, chessmen, chairs] disponer, colocar; [+ clothes, best china] sacar, poner5) (=publish) [+ book] publicar, sacar; [+ record] sacar; [+ appeal, statement, propaganda] hacer; [+ warning] dar; (=broadcast) [+ programme] transmitir; (=circulate) [+ rumour] hacer circular, hacer correrthey have put out a press release denying the allegations — han desmentido las alegaciones en un comunicado de prensa, han emitido un comunicado de prensa negando las alegaciones
6) (=extinguish) [+ light, cigarette, fire] apagar7) (=annoy, upset) enfadar, enojar (LAm)8) (=disconcert) desconcertarhe didn't seem at all put out by the news — no parecía estar en absoluto desconcertado por las noticias
9) (=inconvenience) molestar•
to put o.s. out, she really put herself out for us — se tomó muchas molestias por nosotrosdon't put yourself out, will you! — iro ¡tú, sobre todo, no hagas nada!
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I don't want to put you out — no quiero molestarleare you sure I'm not putting you out? — ¿está seguro de que no le causo ningún inconveniente?
10) (=render incorrect) [+ calculations] desbaratar, echar por tierra11) (Sport) (=eliminate) [+ team, contestant] eliminar (of de)a knee injury put him out of the first two games — una lesión de rodilla lo eliminó de los primeros dos partidos
12) (=dislocate) [+ shoulder, knee] dislocar•
I put my back out lifting that box — me he hecho polvo la espalda levantando esa caja13) (=give anaesthetic to) anestesiar, dormir14) (=lend) [+ money] prestar15) (=subcontract)•
to put sth out to tender — sacar algo a concurso or a licitación16) (Naut) [+ boat] echar al mar2. VI + ADV1) (Naut) salir, zarpar ( from de)2) (US) ** (=agree to sex) acceder, consentir* * *
1.
1) v + o + adv, v + adv + oa) ( put outside) \<\<washing/cat\>\> sacar*b) ( set out) disponer*, colocar*c) ( extend) \<\<arm/tongue\>\> sacar*she put out her hand — tendió or alargó la mano
d) ( dislocate) dislocarse*, zafarse (Chi, Méx)2)a) ( extinguish) \<\<fire/light/cigarette\>\> apagar*b) ( anesthetize) (colloq) dormir*, anestesiarc) ( distort)the new prices have put all our estimates out — los nuevos precios significan que nuestros cálculos son ahora erróneos
d) ( in baseball) \<\<hitter/runner\>\> sacar*, poner* `out'3)a) (offend, upset) molestar, ofendershe was most put out — se molestó or se ofendió mucho
b) ( inconvenience) molestar4)a) (issue, publish) \<\<photograph/statement\>\> publicar*b) ( broadcast) transmitir5) ( pass on)the contract is being put out to tender — van a llamar a concurso or a licitación para el contrato
6) ( sprout) \<\<shoots/buds\>\> echar7) v + o + adv, v + adv + o ( expel) \<\<troublemaker\>\> echar8) v + adv ( Naut) salir*, zarparto put out to sea — hacerse* a la mar
2. adjective (pred)to be put out — estar* molesto
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12 put out
v.1 apagar (fire, light)2 sacar (place outside)to put out one's hand tender la mano4 dejar preparado(a) (arrange for use)5 emitir (report, statement)to be put out estar disgustado(a)7 molestar (inconvenience)to put one's shoulder/knee out dislocarse el hombro/la rodilla9 expulsar, poner fuera, echar fuera, desalojar.10 publicar, sacar a luz. -
13 put out
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14 put-out
adj.1 enojado, contrariado.2 extinguido.3 molesto, disgustado.s.eliminación. -
15 to put out
1 (fire, light, cigarette) apagar2 (put outside - cat, washing, rubbish) sacar4 (inconvenience) molestar; (upset, offend, annoy) molestar, ofender5 (publish, issue) publicar; (broadcast) difundir -
16 to put out of joint
(elbow, shoulder etc) dislocar -
17 to put out feelers
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18 to put (out) to sea
zarpar, hacerse a la mar -
19 to put out of action
inutilizar -
20 to roll or put out the welcome mat for sb
English-spanish dictionary > to roll or put out the welcome mat for sb
См. также в других словарях:
Put Out the Fire — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda «Put Out The Fire» Canción de Queen Álbum Hot Space Publicación 1982 … Wikipedia Español
Put Out the Fire — Исполнитель Queen Альбом Hot Space Дата выпуска 21 мая 1982 Дата записи … Википедия
put out — [v1] upset, irritate; inconvenience aggravate, anger, annoy, bother, burn, confound, discomfit, discommode, discompose, disconcert, discountenance, disoblige, displease, dissatisfy, disturb, embarrass, exasperate, gall, get*, grate, harass,… … New thesaurus
put out to pasture — 1. To release an animal into a pasture to graze 2. To force a person to retire from work • • • Main Entry: ↑pasture * * * put (someone) out to pasture : to force (someone) to leave a job because of old age I m not ready to be put out to pasture… … Useful english dictionary
put out to … from … — ˌput ˈout (to…/from…) derived (of a boat or its sailors) to leave a port • to put out to sea • We put out from Liverpool. Opp: ↑ … Useful english dictionary
put out to grass — put (someone) out to grass Brit : to force (someone) to leave a job because of old age I m not ready to be put out to grass [=put out to pasture] just yet. • • • Main Entry: ↑grass … Useful english dictionary
put out to sea — put (out) to sea : to leave a port, harbor, etc., and begin traveling on the sea The ship put to sea. We will dock tonight and put out to sea tomorrow. • • • Main Entry: ↑sea … Useful english dictionary
Put Out More Flags — the sixth novel by Evelyn Waugh, was first published by Chapman and Hall in 1942. The novel is set during the first year of the Second World War, and follows the wartime activities of characters introduced in Waugh s earlier satirical novels Dec … Wikipedia
put out of mind — index dismiss (put out of consideration) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
put out — adj [not before noun] BrE upset or offended ▪ She felt put out that she hadn t been consulted … Dictionary of contemporary English
put out — adjective never before noun annoyed, offended, or upset by something that someone has said or done: She was feeling extremely put out by his rudeness … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English