I get it - don't do it. That wasn't my question. Lead "alarms" wouldn't have helped and I'm not defending the 117 that I blew the fuse on. The leads were in the correct jacks for the dial setting - they were in the 10A jack and the dial was on the "A"/amps setting. There should not be no alarm showing in that case. The mistake was - I accidentally touched the leads to the outlet and blew the fuse when distracted. Got it. You're not supposed to do that, I get it...
My question - and surprise/alarm is - I don't know why all the other bad fuses. And no, they were never used to check current, nor voltages with the leads in the current jacks. My assumption is I've received some previously used meters from Amazon. If you've bought much from Amazon, you have often received things people have returned. It's usually easy to tell, when the display protector has been removed or there is hair on the meter or the meter is turned backward, with a magnet against the face, or there is a return shipping label from some other Amazon customer in the package, etc...
And I have plenty of devices to check that an outlet is working - I was checking the consistency of the AC readings on each of the meters. How else would you do that? Not that I need to give this info, either, but I personally keep plugs in the current jacks on my multimeters. It's something I rarely have to use, the aforementioned time, notwithstanding. I have clamp meters for that.
And - WHY would checking alkaline batteries with DC voltage on any multimeter blow a fuse? It wouldn't.