The phrase "you have picked me out" typically means that someone has chosen or singled out another person for a specific purpose, attention, or recognition. It can imply that the person feels special or selected among others, whether in a positive context, like being chosen for a team, or a more negative one, such as being singled out for criticism. The tone and context in which it is used can greatly affect its meaning.
It means that he picked your best friend and not you.
she picked you
selected, picked out.
opted
He picked up the wrong cent: what they mean is that he is a dog and when he picked up the wrong cent they mean scent because dogs have a good sense of smell.
Randomly chosen would mean chosen without a schedule or priorities. Something picked at random would mean that it was picked not according to any guidelines or instructions, but just as a serendipity selection.
The original colors of the packers meant cheese. First, they picked yellow, then they didn't know what to pick so they picked green.
that you picked up a baby pigeon
It depends who's doing the picking. I have picked, you have picked, they have picked, we have picked; but he / she / someone (named) / something has picked.
He picked up the wrong cent: what they mean is that he is a dog and when he picked up the wrong cent they mean scent because dogs have a good sense of smell.
Weight, Height, and where he was picked in the draft.
cats with out a home that have been picked up bye patrisha shot for pat