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Put in   /pʊt ɪn/   Listen
Put in

verb
1.
Introduce.  Synonyms: enclose, inclose, insert, introduce, stick in.
2.
Keep or lay aside for future use.  Synonyms: hive away, lay in, salt away, stack away, stash away, store.  "The bear stores fat for the period of hibernation when he doesn't eat"
3.
Break into a conversation.  Synonyms: barge in, break in, butt in, chime in, chisel in, cut in.
4.
Set up for use.  Synonyms: instal, install, set up.  "We put in a new sink"
5.
Make an application as for a job or funding.  Synonym: submit.
6.
To insert between other elements.  Synonyms: come in, inject, interject, interpose, throw in.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Put in" Quotes from Famous Books



... God among them as well as elsewhere, for there were many among them much better than I; that I did not love the house, and that it would have been better if I had procured greater resources for it than for another. Some said I ought to be put in prison; others—but they were not many—defended me in some degree. I saw well enough that they were for the most part right, and now and then I made excuses for myself; though, as I could not tell them the chief reason, which was the commandment of our Lord, I knew not ...
— The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus • Teresa of Avila

... to my Lord Chancellor, and to be ended to-morrow. Baron had got a grant beyond sea, to come in before the reversionary of the Privy Seal. This afternoon Mr. Mathews came to me, to get a certificate of my Lord's and my being sworn, which I put in some forwardness, and so home and ...
— Diary of Samuel Pepys, Complete • Samuel Pepys

... answered Cherry, with kindling eyes. "If that be so, I mind it less. Father is a good man, and full of courage; but I grow full weary of these never-ending talks. Kezzie, thinkest thou that he will be put in prison for keeping from church with his whole house? Some men have been ...
— The Lost Treasure of Trevlyn - A Story of the Days of the Gunpowder Plot • Evelyn Everett-Green

... Seven hundred and Fifty I demanded L50 a volume, and Fraser refused: the poor man then fell dangerously ill, and there could not be a word farther said on the subject; till very lately, when it again became possible, but has not yet been put in practice. All the world cries out, Why do you publish with Fraser? "Because my soul is sick of Booksellers, and of trade, and deception, and 'need and greed' altogether; and this poor Fraser, not worse than the rest of ...
— The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson, - 1834-1872, Vol. I • Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson

... qualitie, but a spirituall and inuisible essence or nature, subsisting by it selfe. Which plainely appeares in that the soules of men haue beeing and continuance as well forth of the bodies of men as in the same; and are as wel subiect to torments as the bodie is. And whereas we can and doe put in practise sundrie actions of life, sense, motion, vnderstanding, we doe it onely by the power and vertue of the soule. Hence ariseth the difference betweene the soules of men, and beasts. The soules of men are substances: but the soules of other creatures seeme not to be ...
— The Grammar of English Grammars • Goold Brown


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