put oneself about

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Verb[edit]

put oneself about (third-person singular simple present puts oneself about, present participle putting oneself about, simple past and past participle put oneself about)

  1. To make oneself visible or noticeable in a place; to make an appearance.
    • 2012, Elizabeth Waite, Time Will Tell:
      Only this morning, before Stan had picked him up to go to work, Matt had yelled that she didn't put herself about enough and didn't mix with his family as much as she should.
  2. (archaic) To make a special effort; to exert oneself, or go out of one's way.
    Synonyms: go out of one's way, put oneself out, put oneself out of the way
    • 1883, William Meynell Whittemore, Sunshine, page 18:
      And Esther put herself about to amuse him, showing him photograph-books and views of various sorts, adding a question or two from time to time, to find out how much he knew, and how well he had been taught.
  3. (informal) To be sexually promiscuous.
    • 2009, Neville Phillips, Smack a Trifle!: Odd Quirks in Prose and Rhyme, page 3:
      Marlene liked to put herself about. She had been known to bestow her favours on allied servicemen in four different war zones on the same night.

Related terms[edit]