put out to … from …

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: put in
Main entry:putderived

Useful english dictionary. 2012.

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  • put out — I ADJ GRADED: v link ADJ If you feel put out, you feel rather annoyed or upset. I did not blame him for feeling put out... He was plainly very put out at finding her there. Syn: annoyed II 1) PHRASAL VERB If you put out an announcement or story,… …   English dictionary

  • 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 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 — index depose (remove), disadvantage, disappointed, discompose, dislodge, disoblige, displace (remove …   Law dictionary

  • put out of sight — 1. To remove from view 2. To eat or drink up (slang) • • • Main Entry: ↑sight …   Useful english dictionary

  • put out — phrasal verb I UK / US 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. II Word forms put out : present tense I/you/we/they put out he/she/it… …   English dictionary

  • put out — {v.} 1. To make a flame or light stop burning; extinguish; turn off. * /Please put the light out when you leave the room./ * /The firemen put out the blaze./ 2. To prepare for the public; produce; make. * /For years he had put out a weekly… …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • put out — {v.} 1. To make a flame or light stop burning; extinguish; turn off. * /Please put the light out when you leave the room./ * /The firemen put out the blaze./ 2. To prepare for the public; produce; make. * /For years he had put out a weekly… …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • put\ out — v 1. To make a flame or light stop burning; extinguish; turn off. Please put the light out when you leave the room. The firemen put out the blaze. 2. To prepare for the public; produce; make. For years he had put out a weekly newspaper. It is a… …   Словарь американских идиом

  • put out — verb 1. to cause inconvenience or discomfort to (Freq. 2) Sorry to trouble you, but... • Syn: ↑trouble, ↑inconvenience, ↑disoblige, ↑discommode, ↑incommode, ↑bother …   Useful english dictionary

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