Home

PUT

Put is a basic English verb that means to move something into a location or position. It is typically transitive: one puts the book on the shelf. The form changes irregularly for past tenses in many verbs, but put has the same form in the present, past, and past participle: put, put, put. The present participle is putting. Because of its versatility, put combines with many particles to create common phrasal verbs and idioms.

Common phrasal verbs with put include put off (delay), put on (dress or pretend), put up (provide

Semantically, put covers placing, assigning, presenting, and applying; it can express placement in space, setting a

In finance, put is a noun referring to a put option, which gives the holder the right

Usage notes: because of its many phrasal verbs, put is a high-frequency verb in everyday English, with

lodging
or
raise;
also
to
put
up
a
sign),
put
in
(insert
or
invest
time),
put
away
(store
or
imprison),
put
forward
(propose),
put
through
(connect
by
phone
or
cause
to
suffer),
put
up
with
(tolerate),
put
together
(assemble).
state,
or
making
a
decision.
It
often
requires
an
object,
but
many
idiomatic
uses
differ
from
a
literal
sense,
making
it
a
trigger
for
figurative
meaning.
to
sell
a
security
at
a
specified
price
before
or
at
expiration.
This
contrasts
with
a
call
option,
which
gives
the
right
to
buy.
meanings
that
extend
beyond
physical
placement
to
postponement,
preparation,
and
communication.