Is “plugging out” electronic devices an American expression?





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Are these valid in American English as opposed to "unplug".




Plug out the charger from the wall.



I plugged out my TV.



I found my radio plugged out.




I started hanging out with some guys of Jamaican descent who were born in Canada and I noticed that they talked about "plugging out" their electronic devices rather than "unplugging" them. Recently I've begun to hear the same expression from non-Jamaicans.



Anyone have any idea how widespread this is?










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  • 4





    FWIW, I'm an American and I have never heard anyone use this expression. I say "unplug".

    – Mixolydian
    1 hour ago


















4















Are these valid in American English as opposed to "unplug".




Plug out the charger from the wall.



I plugged out my TV.



I found my radio plugged out.




I started hanging out with some guys of Jamaican descent who were born in Canada and I noticed that they talked about "plugging out" their electronic devices rather than "unplugging" them. Recently I've begun to hear the same expression from non-Jamaicans.



Anyone have any idea how widespread this is?










share|improve this question




















  • 4





    FWIW, I'm an American and I have never heard anyone use this expression. I say "unplug".

    – Mixolydian
    1 hour ago














4












4








4








Are these valid in American English as opposed to "unplug".




Plug out the charger from the wall.



I plugged out my TV.



I found my radio plugged out.




I started hanging out with some guys of Jamaican descent who were born in Canada and I noticed that they talked about "plugging out" their electronic devices rather than "unplugging" them. Recently I've begun to hear the same expression from non-Jamaicans.



Anyone have any idea how widespread this is?










share|improve this question
















Are these valid in American English as opposed to "unplug".




Plug out the charger from the wall.



I plugged out my TV.



I found my radio plugged out.




I started hanging out with some guys of Jamaican descent who were born in Canada and I noticed that they talked about "plugging out" their electronic devices rather than "unplugging" them. Recently I've begun to hear the same expression from non-Jamaicans.



Anyone have any idea how widespread this is?







american-english






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share|improve this question













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share|improve this question








edited 2 hours ago







Kaique

















asked 2 hours ago









KaiqueKaique

1,497420




1,497420








  • 4





    FWIW, I'm an American and I have never heard anyone use this expression. I say "unplug".

    – Mixolydian
    1 hour ago














  • 4





    FWIW, I'm an American and I have never heard anyone use this expression. I say "unplug".

    – Mixolydian
    1 hour ago








4




4





FWIW, I'm an American and I have never heard anyone use this expression. I say "unplug".

– Mixolydian
1 hour ago





FWIW, I'm an American and I have never heard anyone use this expression. I say "unplug".

– Mixolydian
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






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6














Wiktionary defines the expression plug out as Irish:




(Ireland, transitive, colloquial) To unplug; to remove (an electrical device) from its socket.




From The Daily Edge : 13 words you'll never hear outside of Ireland...




Another uniquely Irish phrase is 'to plug out' as in ' plug out the telly'.







share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    The GloWbE corpus seems to confirm this, but also some other Englishes. 1 relevant example from US, 5 from UK, 10 from Ireland, 4 from India, 2 Bangla Desh, 3 singapore, 3 Jamaica, 1 each from Hong Kong and kenya. None from anywhere else. I have learnt something: I would have said that no native English speaker used this expression.

    – Colin Fine
    1 hour ago











  • @ColinFine Does your corpus search make sure it's looking at that as a verb? After all, you may get "take the plug out of the bath", which is something else entirely.

    – SamBC
    14 mins ago











  • (I never heard it in Britain, but the UK does include a chunk of Ireland, which may affect the results)

    – SamBC
    13 mins ago












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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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oldest

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active

oldest

votes









6














Wiktionary defines the expression plug out as Irish:




(Ireland, transitive, colloquial) To unplug; to remove (an electrical device) from its socket.




From The Daily Edge : 13 words you'll never hear outside of Ireland...




Another uniquely Irish phrase is 'to plug out' as in ' plug out the telly'.







share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    The GloWbE corpus seems to confirm this, but also some other Englishes. 1 relevant example from US, 5 from UK, 10 from Ireland, 4 from India, 2 Bangla Desh, 3 singapore, 3 Jamaica, 1 each from Hong Kong and kenya. None from anywhere else. I have learnt something: I would have said that no native English speaker used this expression.

    – Colin Fine
    1 hour ago











  • @ColinFine Does your corpus search make sure it's looking at that as a verb? After all, you may get "take the plug out of the bath", which is something else entirely.

    – SamBC
    14 mins ago











  • (I never heard it in Britain, but the UK does include a chunk of Ireland, which may affect the results)

    – SamBC
    13 mins ago
















6














Wiktionary defines the expression plug out as Irish:




(Ireland, transitive, colloquial) To unplug; to remove (an electrical device) from its socket.




From The Daily Edge : 13 words you'll never hear outside of Ireland...




Another uniquely Irish phrase is 'to plug out' as in ' plug out the telly'.







share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    The GloWbE corpus seems to confirm this, but also some other Englishes. 1 relevant example from US, 5 from UK, 10 from Ireland, 4 from India, 2 Bangla Desh, 3 singapore, 3 Jamaica, 1 each from Hong Kong and kenya. None from anywhere else. I have learnt something: I would have said that no native English speaker used this expression.

    – Colin Fine
    1 hour ago











  • @ColinFine Does your corpus search make sure it's looking at that as a verb? After all, you may get "take the plug out of the bath", which is something else entirely.

    – SamBC
    14 mins ago











  • (I never heard it in Britain, but the UK does include a chunk of Ireland, which may affect the results)

    – SamBC
    13 mins ago














6












6








6







Wiktionary defines the expression plug out as Irish:




(Ireland, transitive, colloquial) To unplug; to remove (an electrical device) from its socket.




From The Daily Edge : 13 words you'll never hear outside of Ireland...




Another uniquely Irish phrase is 'to plug out' as in ' plug out the telly'.







share|improve this answer















Wiktionary defines the expression plug out as Irish:




(Ireland, transitive, colloquial) To unplug; to remove (an electrical device) from its socket.




From The Daily Edge : 13 words you'll never hear outside of Ireland...




Another uniquely Irish phrase is 'to plug out' as in ' plug out the telly'.








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 48 mins ago

























answered 1 hour ago









user070221user070221

5,08111033




5,08111033








  • 2





    The GloWbE corpus seems to confirm this, but also some other Englishes. 1 relevant example from US, 5 from UK, 10 from Ireland, 4 from India, 2 Bangla Desh, 3 singapore, 3 Jamaica, 1 each from Hong Kong and kenya. None from anywhere else. I have learnt something: I would have said that no native English speaker used this expression.

    – Colin Fine
    1 hour ago











  • @ColinFine Does your corpus search make sure it's looking at that as a verb? After all, you may get "take the plug out of the bath", which is something else entirely.

    – SamBC
    14 mins ago











  • (I never heard it in Britain, but the UK does include a chunk of Ireland, which may affect the results)

    – SamBC
    13 mins ago














  • 2





    The GloWbE corpus seems to confirm this, but also some other Englishes. 1 relevant example from US, 5 from UK, 10 from Ireland, 4 from India, 2 Bangla Desh, 3 singapore, 3 Jamaica, 1 each from Hong Kong and kenya. None from anywhere else. I have learnt something: I would have said that no native English speaker used this expression.

    – Colin Fine
    1 hour ago











  • @ColinFine Does your corpus search make sure it's looking at that as a verb? After all, you may get "take the plug out of the bath", which is something else entirely.

    – SamBC
    14 mins ago











  • (I never heard it in Britain, but the UK does include a chunk of Ireland, which may affect the results)

    – SamBC
    13 mins ago








2




2





The GloWbE corpus seems to confirm this, but also some other Englishes. 1 relevant example from US, 5 from UK, 10 from Ireland, 4 from India, 2 Bangla Desh, 3 singapore, 3 Jamaica, 1 each from Hong Kong and kenya. None from anywhere else. I have learnt something: I would have said that no native English speaker used this expression.

– Colin Fine
1 hour ago





The GloWbE corpus seems to confirm this, but also some other Englishes. 1 relevant example from US, 5 from UK, 10 from Ireland, 4 from India, 2 Bangla Desh, 3 singapore, 3 Jamaica, 1 each from Hong Kong and kenya. None from anywhere else. I have learnt something: I would have said that no native English speaker used this expression.

– Colin Fine
1 hour ago













@ColinFine Does your corpus search make sure it's looking at that as a verb? After all, you may get "take the plug out of the bath", which is something else entirely.

– SamBC
14 mins ago





@ColinFine Does your corpus search make sure it's looking at that as a verb? After all, you may get "take the plug out of the bath", which is something else entirely.

– SamBC
14 mins ago













(I never heard it in Britain, but the UK does include a chunk of Ireland, which may affect the results)

– SamBC
13 mins ago





(I never heard it in Britain, but the UK does include a chunk of Ireland, which may affect the results)

– SamBC
13 mins ago


















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