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put off

A2 neutral separable transitive
In simple words

To do something later instead of now; or to make someone not want to do something because it's unpleasant.

Meanings

1 A2 neutral

To delay or postpone something to a later date or time.

"We'll have to put off the picnic until the weather improves."

"Never put off till tomorrow what you can do today."

— Attributed to Thomas Jefferson; also a common proverb
Grammar: separable
2 B1 idiomatic informal

To cause someone to feel dislike, disgust, or loss of interest.

"The strong smell of paint really put me off my food."

Grammar: separable
3 B1 idiomatic informal

To distract or disturb someone so they lose concentration.

"Stop whispering — you're putting me off!"

Grammar: separable
4 B2 idiomatic neutral

To persuade someone to wait or to dismiss them without a commitment.

"He kept trying to put off his creditors with vague promises."

Grammar: separable
Usage notes

One of the most common phrasal verbs in English. Separable: 'put it off' and 'put off the meeting' are both correct. The discouragement sense takes a person as object: 'That smell put me off.' The delay sense takes a thing or event as object.

Commonly used with

meeting decision work visitors dentist task

Forms

Base
put off
I/you/we/they
3rd person
puts off
he/she/it
Past simple
put off
yesterday
Past participle
put off
have + pp
-ing form
putting off
continuous

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Synonyms

postpone delay defer procrastinate reschedule discourage

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