Definition of Put Aside in English :

Define Put Aside in English

Put Aside meaning in English

Meaning of Put Aside in English

Pronunciation of Put Aside in English

Put Aside pronunciation in English

Pronounce Put Aside in English

Put Aside

see synonyms of put aside

Verb

1. put aside, put away

stop using

Example Sentences:
'the children were told to put away their toys'
'the students put away their notebooks'

2. put aside, put away

turn away from and put aside, perhaps temporarily

Example Sentences:
'it's time for you to put away childish things'

WordNet Lexical Database for English. Princeton University. 2010.


Put Aside

see synonyms of put aside
verb (tr, adverb)
1. 
to move (an object, etc) to one side, esp in rejection
2. 
to store up; save
to put money aside for a rainy day
3. 
to ignore or disregard
let us put aside our differences

Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers


Put Aside

see synonyms of put aside
1. 
to reserve for later use
2. 
to give up; discard

Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.


Put Aside

see synonyms of put aside
v. put, put·ting, puts
v.tr.
1. To place in a specified location; set: She put the books on the table.
2. To cause to be in a specified condition: His gracious manners put me at ease.
3. To cause (one) to undergo something; subject: The interrogators put the prisoner to torture.
4. To assign; attribute: They put a false interpretation on events.
5. To estimate: We put the time at five o'clock.
6. To impose or levy: The governor has put a tax on cigarettes.
7. Games To wager (a stake); bet: put $50 on a horse.
8. Sports To hurl with an overhand pushing motion: put the shot.
9. To bring up for consideration or judgment: put a question to the judge.
10. To express; state: I put my objections bluntly.
11. To render in a specified language or literary form: put prose into verse.
12. To adapt: The lyrics had been put to music.
13. To urge or force to an action: a mob that put the thief to flight.
14. To apply: We must put our minds to it.
15. To force the purchase of (a stock or commodity) by exercising a put option.
v.intr.
Nautical To proceed: The ship put into the harbor.
n.
1. Sports An act of putting the shot.
2. An option to sell a stipulated amount of stock or securities within a specified time and at a fixed price.
adj.
Fixed; stationary: stay put.

The American Heritage ® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition copyright ©2018 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.