Crossword clues for puts
puts
- Criticizes, with "down"
- ___ up with (tolerates)
- Wall Street bids
- Throws, as a shot
- Stockholders' options
- Some Wall Street options
- Some Wall Street bids
- Postpones, with "off"
- Postpones, with ''off''
- Delays, with "off"
- Defers, with "off"
- Criticizes (with "down")
- Clapton: "She ___ on her makeup ..."
- Calls counterparts
- Applies or arranges
- "Nobody ___ Baby in the Corner" (Fall Out Boy)
- "Nobody ___ Baby in a corner" (line from "Dirty Dancing")
- ___ one's best foot forward (tries to impress)
- ___ on (applies)
- ___ down (criticizes)
- __ up a fuss (resists)
- __ away (saves for later)
- Sets (down)
- Attributes
- Plunks (down)
- Throws a shot
- Places in position
- Lays (down)
- Implants
- Wall Street transactions
- Tosses the shot
- Propels a shot
- Shot tosses
- Options for traders
- Expresses
- Certain Wall Street options
- ___ by (saves)
- ___ forth (proposes)
- Calls' cousins
- Stock options
- Some stock options
- Wall Street options
- Partner of calls
- Extinguishes, with "out"
Wiktionary
vb. (en-third-person singular of: put)
Wikipedia
Puts may refer to:
- Kevin Puts
- Put option
- Naked put
- People Under The Stairs, underground hip hop group
- [[Puts in c|puts]], a simple function in the C programming language that writes a string to stdout.
Usage examples of "puts".
She puts the pins to my hair, but keeps her eyes all the time on her own uncertain hands.
Then one of them quickly puts a pair of scissors to my head, to take a curl of hair to keep inside a locket.
The driver puts the steps down for us, but I will not let him take my hand.
He puts the book back in its place, lingering a moment over the aligning of the spine upon the shelf.
And this—' Here he reverently puts his hand upon the great pile of ink-stained papers that litter his desk—'this is their Index.
He fingers the soft flesh beneath my jaw, puts his thumbs to my cheeks, draws down my eye-lids.
He only puts his hand to the slips of paper before him and divides the heap into two uneven piles.
She puts me in my bed, unlooses the curtains—now the night might be any night, any at all.
Will stop up a mouth, better even than menaces, or coins…' He has picked up a paintbrush, puts the hairs to his lip and begins to run them, idly, back and forth.
He puts the paintbrush to his tongue and sucks the hairs into a point.
He gives her a coin—I see the yellow gleam of it—he puts it into her hand, closes her fingers about it with his own.
He still holds me tightly, and after another moment he puts his mouth against my ear.
She does not hesitate now, however, but comes nearer to me and puts her hips about my thigh.
The mouse or bird still moves in the ceiling of the room, and I think he puts back his head, to follow its path.
Now I watch as Richard puts his nail to the groove of the knife and eases free the blade.