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单词 put to death
释义

death /deth/

noun
  1. The state of being dead
  2. Extinction or cessation of life
  3. Manner of dying
  4. Mortality
  5. A deadly plague
  6. The cause of death
  7. The end or destruction of something
  8. A thing considered as fearsome or painful, etc as death
  9. Spiritual lifelessness
  10. The killing of the animal in hunting
ORIGIN: OE dēath; Ger Tod; see dead and die1

deathˈful adjective

  1. Deadly, destructive
  2. Mortal
  3. Deathlike

deathˈless adjective

  1. Never dying
  2. Everlasting

deathˈlessness noun

deathˈlike adjective

  1. Deadly
  2. Like death

deathˈliness noun

deathˈly adjective

  1. Deadly
  2. Deathlike

deathˈward or deathˈwards adverb

deathˈy adjective

death adder noun

A poisonous Australian elapid snake (Acanthophis antarcticus)

deathˈ-agˈony noun

The struggle often preceding death

death angel noun

Death cap

deathˈbed noun

  1. The bed on which a person dies
  2. The last illness
  3. See also on one's deathbed below

deathbed repentance noun

Repentance for one's faults, sins, etc when it is too late to reform one's life

deathˈ-bell noun

The passing bell

deathˈblow noun

  1. A blow that causes death
  2. An action that brings about the end (figurative)

death cap or death cup noun

A very poisonous toadstool (Amanita phalloides) often mistaken for an edible mushroom

death cell noun

A prison cell for condemned prisoners awaiting execution

death certificate noun

A legal certificate on which a doctor states the fact and usu the cause of a person's death

deathˈ-damp noun

A cold sweat preceding death

deathˈ-dealing adjective

Fatal, likely to cause death

death duty noun

(often in pl) duty paid on inheritance of property (now replaced by inheritance tax (see under inherit))

deathˈ-fire noun

A light supposed to presage death

death futures plural noun

The life insurance policies of people who are terminally ill, bought for a lump sum by an investor who receives the proceeds of the policy on the death of the insured

death house noun (US inf)

Death row

death knell noun

  1. The ringing of a bell to announce a death
  2. Something that announces the end of one's hopes, ambitions, etc (figurative)

deathˈ-marked adjective

Marked for or by death, destined to die

death mask noun

A plaster cast taken from the face after death

deathˈmatch noun (informal)

In computer games, a mode of play in which players deliberately attempt to eliminate one another

death metal noun

A particularly loud and fast style of heavy metal music, usu characterized by a preoccupation with death, the vocabulary and imagery of horror films and the occult

death penalty noun

The legal taking of a person's life as punishment for crime

deathˈ-pracˈtised adjective (Shakespeare)

Threatened with death by malicious arts

death rate noun

The proportion of deaths to the population

death rattle noun

A rattling in the throat that sometimes precedes death

death ray noun

An imaginary ray able to kill

death roll noun (obsolete)

A death toll

death row noun (US)

The part of a prison where prisoners who have been sentenced to death are confined

death'sˈ-head noun

  1. The skull of a human skeleton, or a figure of it
  2. A memorial ring bearing such a figure

death's-head moth noun

A hawk moth with pale markings on the back of the thorax somewhat like a skull

death slide noun

Another name for a zipwire

deathsˈman noun (Shakespeare)

An executioner

deathˈ-song noun

A song sung before dying

death squad noun

An unofficial terrorist group who murder those whose views or activities they disapprove of, often operating with the tacit or covert support of the government of the country

death star noun

A small thin star-shaped metal plate with sharpened points, used as a missile

deathˈ-stroke noun

A death blow

death throe noun

The dying agony

deathˈ-token noun (Shakespeare)

A sign or token of impending death, a plague-spot

death toll noun

A list of the dead, eg after an accident or a natural disaster

deathˈtrap noun

An unsafe structure, vehicle or place that exposes one to great danger of death

death warrant noun

An order from the authorities for the execution of a criminal

deathˈwatch noun

  1. A vigil, a watch kept beside a dying person
  2. A deathwatch beetle

deathwatch beetle noun

A beetle that produces a ticking noise, found esp in house timbers (genus Xestobium)

death wish noun (psychology)

A wish, conscious or unconscious, for death for oneself or another

deathˈ-wound noun

A wound that causes death

at death's door

Very near to death

catch one's death (of cold) (informal)

To catch a very bad cold

death on

Fatal to, fond of, good at

do or put to death

  1. To kill
  2. To cause to be killed

gates or jaws of death

The point of death

in at the death

  1. Having caught up with a hunted animal before the dogs have killed it
  2. Present at the finish, crux, climax, etc of anything (figurative)

like death warmed up or over (informal)

Very unwell

like grim death

Tenaciously

on one's deathbed

About to die

sign one's own death warrant

To do something that makes one's downfall inevitable

to death

  1. (until) dead
  2. To a state of exhaustion
  3. To a point of overuse

to the death

To the very end

put1 /pŭt/

transitive verb (putting /pŭtˈing/; put)
  1. To place, or cause to be, in such and such a position, state, predicament, relation, etc
  2. To set
  3. To place, lay or deposit
  4. To apply
  5. To append or affix
  6. To connect
  7. To add
  8. To commit
  9. To assign
  10. To start (someone on eg a diet, a study or a track)
  11. To push or thrust
  12. (also putt) to cast, throw or hurl (esp by a thrusting movement of the hand from the shoulder)
  13. To drive
  14. To impel
  15. To convey or transport
  16. To force or constrain
  17. To incite
  18. To subject
  19. To reduce
  20. To convert
  21. To render
  22. To express
  23. To assert
  24. To propound
  25. To submit to a vote
  26. To impose
  27. To impute
  28. To call on, oblige, stake, venture or invest
  29. To repose (eg trust, confidence)
intransitive verb
  1. To thrust (archaic or Scot and N Eng)
  2. To proceed, make one's way (nautical)
  3. To set out, esp hurriedly
  4. To flow (US)
noun
  1. A push or thrust
  2. (also putt) a throw, esp of a heavy object from the shoulder
  3. On the Stock Exchange, an option of selling within a certain time certain securities or commodities, at a stipulated price (also put option)
ORIGIN: Late OE putian (found in the verbal noun putung instigation); there were also potian and pȳtan, which may account for some of the dialect forms; cf Dan putte, Swed putta

putter /pŭtˈər/ noun

  1. Someone who puts
  2. Someone who pushes or hauls trams in a coalmine (historical)

puttˈing noun

Putting the shot (qv below)

putˈ-and-take noun

A gambling game played with a top on which are marked instructions to give to or take from a bank or pool of objects

putˈ-down noun

  1. A snub
  2. An action intended to assert one's superiority

putˈ-in noun (rugby)

The act of throwing the ball into a set scrum

putˈ-off noun

  1. An excuse or evasion
  2. A postponement

putˈ-on noun

A hoax

put option see put (n) above.

puttˈer-on noun (Shakespeare)

An instigator

puttˈer-out noun (obsolete)

Someone who deposited money on going abroad, on condition of receiving a larger sum on his return, if he ever returned

putˈ-through noun

A transaction in which a broker arranges the buying and the selling of shares

puttˈing-stone noun

A heavy stone used in putting the shot

put-upˈ adjective

Arranged beforehand in a false but deceptively plausible way

put about

  1. To publish or circulate
  2. To change the course of (esp a ship) or to change course
  3. To distress (Scot)

put across

  1. To carry out successfully, bring off
  2. To perform so as to carry the audience with one

put an end (or a stop) to

To cause to discontinue

put away

  1. To renounce
  2. To divorce
  3. To kill (esp an old or ill animal)
  4. To stow away, pack up or set aside
  5. To put into the proper or desirable place
  6. To imprison
  7. To admit to a mental hospital (informal)
  8. To eat or drink (informal)

put back

  1. To push backward
  2. To delay
  3. To repulse
  4. To turn and sail back for port (nautical)
  5. To reduce one's finances (informal)

put by

  1. To set aside
  2. To parry
  3. To store up

put case see under case2

put down

  1. To crush or quell
  2. To kill (esp an old or ill animal)
  3. To snub or humiliate
  4. To degrade
  5. To snub, silence or confute (Shakespeare)
  6. To enter, write down on paper
  7. To reckon
  8. To attribute
  9. To give up (rare)
  10. To surpass or outshine
  11. To preserve, put in pickle (dialect)
  12. Of an aeroplane, to land (often with at)
  13. To pay (a deposit)
  14. To put (a baby) to bed (informal)
  15. To drop (a catch) (cricket)

put for

To make an attempt to gain

put forth

  1. To extend
  2. To propose
  3. To publish
  4. To exert
  5. To display
  6. To lend at interest
  7. To set out from port
  8. To produce or extrude

put forward

  1. To propose
  2. To advance

put in

  1. To introduce
  2. To insert
  3. To lodge, deposit or hand in
  4. To make a claim or application (for)
  5. To enter
  6. To enter a harbour
  7. To interpose
  8. To perform towards completing a total
  9. To spend, pass or fill up (time) with some occupation
  10. To appoint

put in an appearance see under appear

put in mind

To remind

put it across someone

To defeat someone by ingenuity

put it on

To pretend (to be ill, etc)

put it past someone

(usu with not) to judge it inconsistent with someone's character

put off

  1. To lay aside
  2. To lay aside the character of
  3. To palm off
  4. To turn (someone) aside from what he or she wants or intends with evasions, excuses or unsatisfying substitutes
  5. To divert, turn aside from a purpose
  6. To postpone
  7. To idle away, spend in vain
  8. To disconcert
  9. To cause aversion or disinclination in
  10. To push from shore
  11. To take off (archaic)
  12. To dismiss (archaic)

put on

  1. To clothe oneself or someone else with
  2. To assume (a character or quality), esp deceptively
  3. To mislead or deceive
  4. To superimpose
  5. To impose
  6. To affix, attach, apply
  7. To add (eg weight, charges, etc)
  8. To stake or wager
  9. To move forward
  10. To move faster (obsolete)
  11. To set to work
  12. To set in operation
  13. To incite
  14. To turn on the supply of
  15. To score
  16. To stage
  17. See also well put on below

put on to

  1. To make aware of
  2. To connect with by telephone

put out

  1. To expel
  2. To dismiss from a game and innings
  3. To send out
  4. To stretch out
  5. To extinguish
  6. To place (money) at interest
  7. To expand
  8. To publish
  9. To disconcert
  10. To inconvenience
  11. To offend
  12. To dislocate
  13. To exert
  14. To produce
  15. To place with others or at a distance
  16. To go out to sea, leave port
  17. To remove bodily or blind (an eye)
  18. To render unconscious (slang)
  19. (of a woman) to be willing to grant sexual favours (slang, orig N American)

put over

  1. To refer (Shakespeare)
  2. To carry through successfully
  3. To impress an audience, spectators, the public, favourably with
  4. To impose, pass off

put paid to see under paid

put the make on see under make1

put through

  1. To bring to an end
  2. To accomplish
  3. To put in telephonic communication
  4. To cause to undergo or suffer
  5. To process (computing)

putting the shot, stone or weight

The act or sport of hurling a heavy stone or weight from the hand by a sudden thrust from the shoulder (see also putt1)

put to

  1. To apply
  2. To add to
  3. To connect with
  4. To harness
  5. To shut
  6. To set to

put to death see under death

put to it

  1. To press hard
  2. To distress

put to rights see under right1

put to sea

To begin a voyage

put to the sword see under sword

put two and two together

To draw a conclusion from various facts

put up

  1. To accommodate with lodging
  2. To take lodgings
  3. To nominate or stand for election
  4. To offer for sale
  5. To present (eg a good game, a fight, or a defence, a prayer)
  6. To stake
  7. To parcel up
  8. To supply and pack (an order, a picnic, etc)
  9. To stow away, put aside
  10. To sheathe
  11. To settle beforehand
  12. To compound
  13. To endure tamely (obsolete)
  14. To start (a hare) from cover

put-up job

A dishonest scheme prearranged usu by several people

put upon

  1. To take undue advantage of
  2. To impose on

put up to

  1. To incite to
  2. To make conversant with, to supply with useful information or tips about

put up with

To endure

stay put

To remain passively in the position assigned

well put on or (Scot) well putten on

Respectably dressed

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更新时间:2024/9/22 16:42:26