Don't turn off the lights
불을 끄지 마세요
put something out
phrasal verb with put verb
to make a light stop shining by pressing or moving a switch:
Did you put the lights out downstairs?
아래층에 불을 껐어요?
Put that torch out!
(STOP BURNING)
B1
to make something such as a fire or cigarette stop burning:
Firefighters have been called to put out the fire in the city centre.
Would you mind putting your cigarette out, please?
put someone out
phrasal verb with put verb
to cause trouble or extra work for someone:
Would it put you out if we came tomorrow instead of today?
[ M usually passive ]
to annoy or upset someone, often by what you do or say to them:
She was very put out when they turned up two hours late for dinner.
He seemed a bit put out at not having been invited.
put yourself out
phrasal verb with put verb
to make an effort to do something to help someone, even if it is not convenient:
Ethan is always willing to put himself out for other people.
put something out
phrasal verb with put verb
(MOVE FORWARD)
to move forward part of your body, such as your hand or your tongue, from your body:
put something out
phrasal verb with put verb
(LIGHT)
to make a light stop shining by pressing or moving a switch:
Did you put the lights out downstairs?
Put that torch out!
(STOP BURNING)
B1
to make something such as a fire or cigarette stop burning:
Firefighters have been called to put out the fire in the city centre.
Would you mind putting your cigarette out, please?
put someone out
phrasal verb with put verb
UK
to cause trouble or extra work for someone:
Would it put you out if we came tomorrow instead of today?
[ M usually passive ]
to annoy or upset someone, often by what you do or say to them:
She was very put out when they turned up two hours late for dinner.
He seemed a bit put out at not having been invited.
put yourself out
phrasal verb with put verb
to make an effort to do something to help someone, even if it is not convenient:
Ethan is always willing to put himself out for other people.
put something out
phrasal verb with put verb
present participle putting | past tense and past participle put
(MOVE FORWARD)
to move forward part of your body, such as your hand or your tongue, from your body:
She put out her hand to shake mine.
Don't put your tongue out - it's rude.
(INJURE)
informal
to injure part of your body by causing it to be moved out of its correct position:
He put his knee out playing tennis.
(MAKE WRONG)
If a mistake puts out a set of mathematical calculations, it causes them to be wrong:
That one error put the figures out by several thousand pounds.
(GIVE WORK)
UK
(US usually contract something out)
If you put work out, you employ someone outside your organization to do it:
The council has put the job of street-cleaning out to a private firm.
put out
phrasal verb with put verb
US slang
(especially of a woman) to agree to have sex:
I wasn't going to put out just because he'd paid for dinner.
나는 그가 저녁값을 지불했다고 해서 섹스에 동의할 생각은 없었다.
put someone out
phrasal verb with put verb
(ANNOY)
to annoy, upset, or inconvenience someone:
Would you be put out if we came tomorrow instead of today?
Don’t Put Out the Fire - A Snapchat Streak Addiction
How to start a Snapchat Streak and keep it alive to boost your Snap Score
Your Snapchat Streak (or Snapstreak) tracks how many days in a row you and a friend have sent Snaps to each other.
Keeping up a Snapchat Streak gives you extra points for your Snapchat score.
Chat messages and Snaps sent to group chats don't count toward a Snapchat Streak.