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The Oxford Thesaurus An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms INTRO ...

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him as 'pukka sahib'.<br />

puling adj. whining, wailing, querulous, whimpering, snivelling,<br />

weeping, caterwauling: <strong>The</strong> third-class carriage was filled with<br />

chickens, pigs, and puling infants.<br />

pull v. 1 draw, haul, drag, lug, tow, trail: Do you think the car<br />

is strong enough to pull that load? 2 tug, jerk, yank, wrench,<br />

pluck: He suddenly pulled on the door and it opened. 3<br />

Sometimes, pull out or up. pluck (out), withdraw, extract,<br />

uproot, pick (up or out), snatch out or up, tear or rip out or<br />

up, cull, select, draw out, take out, remove: We pulled out all<br />

the weeds and threw them on the compost heap. He has a<br />

collection <strong>of</strong> jokes pulled from his speeches. 4 Often, pull<br />

apart. tear or rip (up or apart), rend, pull asunder, wrench<br />

(apart), stretch, strain: This fabric is so weak it pulled<br />

apart as soon as I touched it. I think I pulled a muscle in my<br />

calf. 5 Often, pull in. attract, draw, lure, entice, allure,<br />

catch, captivate, fascinate, capture: We need something besides<br />

the 'Sale' sign to pull the customers into the shop. 6 pull<br />

apart. pull to pieces or shreds, criticize, attack, pick or take<br />

apart or to pieces, flay, run down, Colloq put down, pan, knock,<br />

devastate, destroy, slate, Slang slam: <strong>The</strong> critics really<br />

pulled apart her new play. 7 pull away. withdraw, draw or drive<br />

or go or move away; outrun, outpace, draw ahead <strong>of</strong>: She pulled<br />

away abruptly when he touched her hand. <strong>The</strong> green car is pulling<br />

away from the others. 8 pull back. a withdraw, draw back, back<br />

<strong>of</strong>f or away, recoil, shrink (away or back) from, shy, flinch<br />

(from), jump, start: <strong>The</strong> burglar pulled back when he saw the<br />

ferocious dog. b withdraw, (beat a) retreat, take flight, flee,<br />

turn tail, drop or fall back, back out: We cheered when we saw<br />

the enemy troops pulling back. 9 pull down. a demolish, raze,<br />

level, destroy, wreck: It takes only hours to pull down a house<br />

that it has taken generations to build. b draw, receive, get, be<br />

paid, earn: He pulls down much more at his new job. c lower,<br />

debase, diminish, reduce, degrade, dishonour, disgrace,<br />

discredit, humiliate: When his fortunes declined, he pulled<br />

down all his friends with him. 10 pull for. hope or pray for, be<br />

enthusiastic for, be supportive <strong>of</strong>, support, campaign for, cheer<br />

for, encourage, boost, US root for: We are all pulling for you<br />

to win. 11 pull in. a drive up, arrive, come, draw up or in,<br />

reach: <strong>The</strong> train finally pulled in at midnight. We need petrol,<br />

so pull in at the next filling station. b arrest, apprehend,

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