lease vs put out

lease

verb
  • To release; let go; unloose. 

  • To tell lies; tell lies about; slander; calumniate. 

  • To glean. 

  • To glean, gather up leavings. 

  • To grant a lease as a landlord; to let. 

  • To gather. 

  • To pick, select, pick out; to pick up. 

  • To hold a lease as a tenant. 

noun
  • An interest in land granting exclusive use or occupation of real estate for a limited period; a leasehold. 

  • An interest granting exclusive use of any thing, such as a car or boat. 

  • The period of such an interest. 

  • The document containing such a contract or deed. 

  • An open pasture or common. 

  • The contract or deed under which such an interest is granted. 

  • The place at which the warp-threads cross on a loom. 

put out

verb
  • To expel. 

  • To cause a player on offense to be out. 

  • To cause someone to be out of sorts; to annoy, impose, inconvenience, or disturb. 

  • To dislocate (a joint). 

  • To knock out: to eliminate from a competition. 

  • To blind (eyes). 

  • To remove from office. 

  • To go out, to head out, especially (sailing) to set sail. 

  • To broadcast, to publish. 

  • To produce, to emit. 

  • To place outside, to remove, particularly 

  • To extinguish (fire). 

  • To consent to sex. 

  • Synonym of knock out: to render unconscious. 

  • To turn off (light). 

adj
  • Taking offense; indignant. 

noun
  • The statistic of the number of outs a defensive player directly caused. 

How often have the words lease and put out occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )