The verb 'put' is one of the most common words in English, ranking among the top twenty verbs in frequency, yet its etymology is one of the more obscure in the language. It derives from Old English 'putian,' meaning 'to push, thrust, or impel,' attested in late Old English texts. Beyond this, the trail grows uncertain. The word has cognates in Scandinavian dialects — Swedish dialectal 'putta' (to put, to push) and Danish dialectal 'putte' (to put, to place) — and in Middle Dutch 'pote' (to plant, set in the ground), but the deeper Proto-Germanic or Proto-Indo-European ancestry is not securely established.
Some scholars have proposed a connection to Latin 'putāre' (to reckon, to prune — source of English 'compute,' 'dispute,' 'impute'), but this is generally rejected by modern etymologists on phonological grounds. The similarity appears to be coincidental. Others have suggested a link to a Proto-Germanic base *put- meaning 'to swell, to push out,' which might also be related to 'pudding' and 'pudgy,' but this remains speculative.
What is well documented is the word's semantic evolution within English. In Old and early Middle English, 'put' primarily meant 'to push' or 'to thrust' — a forceful physical action. The phrase 'to put out' originally meant 'to thrust out,' and 'to put forth' meant 'to push forward.' By the thirteenth century, the meaning had broadened to include
The golf term 'putt' provides a particularly interesting window into the word's history. In Scottish English, which preserved many archaic features of pronunciation, 'put' was pronounced with a short /ʌ/ vowel rather than the /ʊ/ that became standard in southern English. When golf terminology was formalized in the eighteenth century, the spelling 'putt' was introduced to distinguish the gentle green stroke from the general verb 'put.' Both words
The phonological history of 'put' itself is notable for an irregularity. Most words with Middle English short /u/ before a single consonant underwent the foot-strut split in southern English during the seventeenth century, shifting from /ʊ/ to /ʌ/ — hence 'cut,' 'but,' 'nut,' 'cup.' However, 'put' (along with 'push,' 'pull,' 'full,' 'bull,' and 'bush') retained the older /ʊ/ pronunciation. The reasons for this resistance are debated: some linguists attribute it to the influence of the following
As a phrasal verb base, 'put' is extraordinarily productive. English speakers put up with (tolerate), put off (postpone or repel), put out (extinguish or inconvenience), put down (criticize or euthanize), put away (store or imprison), put on (dress or pretend), put through (connect or subject to), and put forward (propose). This proliferation of phrasal verbs, where a simple monosyllabic verb combines with prepositions to create dozens of distinct meanings, is characteristic of Germanic languages and particularly of English, where the Viking and Norman influences encouraged both Germanic compounding and Romance vocabulary, allowing phrasal verbs and Latinate synonyms to coexist.
The word's journey from a forceful verb of pushing and thrusting to the neutral, all-purpose verb of placement is a classic case of semantic bleaching — the process by which a word's specific, vivid meaning is worn down through heavy use until only a general, abstract sense remains. Today, 'put' is so semantically neutral that it requires a preposition or context to convey any specific action, a far cry from the muscular 'push' and 'thrust' of its Old English ancestor.