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Verb (used with object)
Noun
Journalism . a portion of copy assigned to a Linotype operator or compositor, usually part of a story or article.
Movies .
- a scene, or a portion of a scene, photographed without any interruption or break.
- an instance of such continuous operation of the camera.
Verb phrases
take after,
- to resemble (another person, as a parent) physically, temperamentally, etc.
- The baby took after his mother.
- Also, take off after, take out after. to follow; chase
- The detective took after the burglars.
take back,
- to regain possession of
- to take back one's lawn mower.
- to return, as for exchange
- It was defective, so I took it back to the store.
- to allow to return; resume a relationship with
- She said she would never take him back again.
- to cause to remember
- It takes one back to the old days.
- to retract
- to take back a statement.
take down,
- to move from a higher to a lower level or place.
- to pull apart or take apart; dismantle; disassemble.
- to write down; record.
- to diminish the pride or arrogance of; humble
- to take someone down a notch or two.
take for,
- to assume to be
- I took it for the truth.
- to assume falsely to be; mistake for
- to be taken for a foreigner.
take in,
- to permit to enter; admit.
- to alter (an article of clothing) so as to make smaller.
- to provide lodging for.
- to include; encompass.
- to grasp the meaning of; comprehend.
- to deceive; trick; cheat.
- to observe; notice.
- to visit or attend
- to take in a show.
- to furl (a sail).
- to receive as proceeds, as from business activity.
- Chiefly British . to subscribe to
- to take in a magazine.
take off,
- to remove
- Take off your coat.
- to lead away
- The child was taken off by kidnappers.
- Informal . to depart; leave
- They took off yesterday for California.
- to leave the ground, as an airplane.
- to move onward or forward with a sudden or intense burst of speed
- The police car took off after the drunken driver.
- to withdraw or remove from
- She was taken off the night shift.
- to remove by death; kill
- Millions were taken off by the Black Plague.
- to make a likeness or copy of; reproduce.
- to subtract, as a discount; deduct
- Shop early and we'll take off 20 percent.
- Informal . to imitate; mimic; burlesque.
- Informal . to achieve sudden, marked growth, success, etc.
- Sales took off just before Christmas. The actor's career took off after his role in that movie.
take on,
- to hire; employ.
- to undertake; assume
- to take on new responsibilities.
- to acquire
- The situation begins to take on a new light.
- to accept as a challenge; contend against
- to take on a bully.
- Informal . to show great emotion; become excited
- There's no need to take on so.
take out,
- to withdraw; remove
- to take out a handkerchief.
- to procure by application
- to take out an insurance policy.
- to carry out for use or consumption elsewhere
- to take a book out of the library; to get food to take out.
- to escort; invite
- He takes out my sister now and then.
- to set out; start
- They took out for the nearest beach.
- Slang . to kill; destroy.
take to,
- to devote or apply oneself to; become habituated to
- to take to drink.
- to respond favorably to; begin to like
- They took to each other at once.
- to go to
- to take to one's bed.
- to have recourse to; resort to
- She took to getting up at five to go jogging before work.
take up,
- to occupy oneself with the study or practice of
- She took up painting in her spare time.
- to lift or pick up
- He took up the fallen leaves with a rake.
- to occupy; cover
- A grand piano would take up half of our living room.
- to consume; use up; absorb
- Traveling to her job takes up a great deal of time.
- to begin to advocate or support; sponsor
- He has taken up another struggling artist.
- to continue; resume
- We took up where we had left off.
- to reply to in order to reprove
- The author takes up his critics in the preface of his latest book.
- to assume
- He took up the duties of the presidency.
- to absorb
- Use a sponge to take up the spilled milk.
- to make shorter, as by hemming
- to take up the sleeves an inch.
- to make tighter, as by winding in
- to take up the slack in a reel of tape.
- to deal with in discussion
- to take up the issue of mass transit.
- to adopt seriously
- to take up the idea of seeking public office.
- to accept, as an offer or challenge.
- to buy as much as is offered
- The sale was taken up in a matter of days.
- Chiefly British . to clear by paying off, as a loan.
- Obsolete . to arrest (esp. a runaway slave).
Idioms
take it
- to accept or believe something; aquiesce
- I'll take it on your say-so.
- Informal . to be able to resist or endure hardship, abuse, etc.
- to understand
- I take it that you're not interested.
take it out in
- to accept as payment for services or as an equivalent of monetary compensation
- He takes it out in goods instead of cash.
take it out of
- to exhaust; enervate
- Every year the winter takes it out of me.
- to exact payment from; penalize
- They took it out of your pay.
tác giả
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