Obs. or dial. Also 67 iutt(e. [app. onomatopœic; expressing both in sound and feeling the obstructed action in question.]
† 1. intr. To strike, knock or push against something. Obs.
1548. Udall, Erasm. Par. Luke xi. 110. It shal no where stumble nor iutte against any thyng.
156573. Cooper, Thesaurus, s.v. Incurro, To runne & iutte or hitte against a thing in the darke.
1628. Earle, Microcosm., Plausible man (Arb.), 59. One that would faine run an euen path and iutt against no man.
2. trans. To push, thrust, shove, jolt; to knock against something. Obs. exc. dial.
1565. Jewel, Def. Apol., II. xiv. (1611), 267. These two propositions may well stand together without iutting the one the other out of place.
1607. Schol. Disc. agst. Antichr., II. vi. 59. C. Aufidius [dyed] by iutting his foot, when he was entring into Senat.
1863. Barnes, Dorset Gloss., Jut, to give one a sudden blow or concussion when still, particularly when writing.
1886. S. W. Linc. Gloss., s.v., The waggons did jut us.