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1 put\ somebody\ in\ his\ place
См. также в других словарях:
put yourself in somebody somebody's place — put yourself in sb else s/sb s ˈplace idiom to imagine that you are in sb else s situation • Of course I was upset just put yourself in my place. Main entry: ↑placeidiom … Useful english dictionary
put it to somebody that … — put it to sb that… idiom to suggest sth to sb to see if they can argue against it • I put it to you that you are the only person who had a motive for the crime. Main entry: ↑putidiom … Useful english dictionary
put pressure on somebody (to do something) — put ˈpressure on sb (to do sth) idiom to force or to try to persuade sb to do sth • Advertisements put pressure on girls to be thin. Main entry: ↑pressureidiom … Useful english dictionary
put up with somebody — ˌput ˈup with sb/sth derived to accept sb/sth that is annoying, unpleasant, etc. without complaining Syn: ↑tolerate • I don t know how she puts up with him. • I m not going to put up with their smoking any longer. Main entry … Useful english dictionary
put years on somebody — put ˈyears on sb idiom to make sb feel or look older • The illness put years on him. Main entry: ↑yearidiom … Useful english dictionary
put yourself in somebody else's place — put yourself in sb else s/sb s ˈplace idiom to imagine that you are in sb else s situation • Of course I was upset just put yourself in my place. Main entry: ↑placeidiom … Useful english dictionary
put out for somebody — ˌput ˈout (for sb) derived (NAmE, slang) to agree to have sex with sb Main entry: ↑putderived … Useful english dictionary
put roses in somebody's cheeks — put ˈroses in sb s cheeks idiom (BrE, informal) to make sb look healthy Main entry: ↑roseidiom … Useful english dictionary
put words into somebody's mouth — put ˈwords into sb s mouth idiom to suggest that sb has said sth when in fact they have not Main entry: ↑wordidiom … Useful english dictionary
put words in somebody's mouth — verb To attribute to somebody something he or she did not say; to claim inaccurately that somebody said or intended something. I hope Im not putting words in your mouth. Did you just tell me to go home early? … Wiktionary
put yourself in somebody's shoes — be in sb s shoes | put yourself in sb s shoes idiom to be in, or imagine that you are in, another person s situation, especially when it is an unpleasant or difficult one • I wouldn t like to be in your shoes when they find out about it. • Well… … Useful english dictionary