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Definition of protrude verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

protrude

verb
 
/prəˈtruːd/
 
/prəʊˈtruːd/
[intransitive] (formal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they protrude
 
/prəˈtruːd/
 
/prəʊˈtruːd/
he / she / it protrudes
 
/prəˈtruːdz/
 
/prəʊˈtruːdz/
past simple protruded
 
/prəˈtruːdɪd/
 
/prəʊˈtruːdɪd/
past participle protruded
 
/prəˈtruːdɪd/
 
/prəʊˈtruːdɪd/
-ing form protruding
 
/prəˈtruːdɪŋ/
 
/prəʊˈtruːdɪŋ/
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  1. to stick out from a place or a surface
    • protruding teeth
    • protrude from something He hung his coat on a nail protruding from the wall.
    Extra Examples
    • One or two chairs protruded into the central aisle.
    • The tip of the envelope was just protruding from her bag.
    Oxford Collocations DictionaryProtrude is used with these nouns as the subject:
    • knife
    • lip
    • stomach
    See full entry
    Word Originearly 17th cent. (in the sense ‘thrust something forward or onward’): from Latin protrudere, from pro- ‘forward, out’ + trudere ‘to thrust’.
See protrude in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
alloy
noun
 
 
From the Topic
Physics and chemistry
C2
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