Phrasal Verb related to TAKE Phrasal Verbs: take after 1. To follow as an example. 2. To resemble in appearance, temperament, or character. take apart 1. To divide into parts after disassembling. 2. To dissect or analyze (a theory, for example), usually in an effort to discover hidden or innate flaws or weaknesses. 3. Slang To beat up; thrash. take back To retract (something stated or written). take down 1. To bring to a lower position from a higher one. 2. To take apart; dismantle: take down the Christmas tree. 3. To lower the arrogance or the self-esteem of (a person): really took him down during the debate. 4. To put down in writing. take for 1. To regard as: Do you take me for a fool? 2. To consider mistakenly: Don't take silence for approval. take in 1. To grant admittance to; receive as a guest or an employee. 2. To reduce in size; make smaller or shorter: took in the waist on the pair of pants. 3. To include or constitute. 4. To understand: couldn't take in the meaning of the word. 5. To deceive or swindle: was taken in by a confidence artist. 6. To look at thoroughly; view: took in the sights. 7. To accept (work) to be done in one's house for pay: took in typing. 8. To convey (a prisoner) to a police station. take off 1. To remove, as clothing: take one's coat off; take off one's galoshes. 2. To release: took the brake off. 3. To deduct as a discount: took 20 percent off. 4. To carry off or away. 5. Slang a. To go off; leave: took off in a hurry. b. To achieve wide use or popularity: a new movie that really took off. 6. To rise into the air or begin flight: The plane took off on time. 7. To discontinue: took off the commuter special. 8. To withhold service due, as from one's work: I'm taking off three days during May. take on 1. To undertake or begin to handle: took on extra responsibilities. 2. To hire; engage: took on more workers during the harvest. 3. To oppose in competition: a wrestler who took on all comers. 4. Informal To display violent or passionate emotion: Don't take on so! 5. To acquire (an appearance, for example) as or as if one's own: Over the years he has taken on the look of a banker. take out 1. To extract; remove: took the splinter out. 2. To secure (a license, for example) by application to an authority. 3. Informal To escort, as a date. 4. To give vent to: Don't take your frustration out in such an aggressive manner. 5. To obtain as an equivalent in a different form: took out the money owed in services. 6. Informal To begin a course; set out: The police took out after the thieves.
7. Slang a. To kill; murder: Two snipers took out an enemy platoon. b. To search for and destroy in an armed attack or other such encounter: Combat pilots, flying low to avoid radar, took out the guerrilla leader's bunker in a single mission. take over 1. To assume control, management, or responsibility. 2. To assume the control or management of or the responsibility for: She took over the job after he left. 3. To become dominant: Our defense took over in the second half of the game. take to 1. To have recourse to; go to, as for safety: took to the woods. 2. To develop as a habit or a steady practice: take to drink. 3. To become fond of or attached to: "Two keen minds that they are, they took to each other" Jack Kerouac. take up 1. To raise; lift. 2. To reduce in size; shorten or tighten: take up a gown. 3. To pay off (an outstanding debt, mortgage, or note). 4. To accept (an option, bet, or challenge) as offered. 5. To begin again; resume: Let's take up where we left off. 6. To use up, consume, or occupy: The extra duties took up most of my time. 7. To develop an interest in or devotion to: take up mountain climbing. 8. To deal with: Let's take up each problem one at a time. 9. To assume: took up a friendly attitude. 10. To absorb or adsorb: crops taking up nutrients. 11. To enter into (a profession or business): took up engineering. Idioms: on the take Informal Taking or seeking to take bribes or illegal income: "There were policemen on the take" Scott Turow. take a bath Informal To experience serious financial loss: "Small investors who latched on to hot new issues took a bath in Wall Street" Paul A. Samuelson. take account of To take into consideration. take away from To detract from: Drab curtains took away from the otherwise lovely room. take care To be careful: Take care or you will slip on the ice. take care of To assume responsibility for the maintenance, support, or treatment of. take charge To assume control or command. take effect 1. To become operative, as under law or regulation: The curfew takes effect at midnight. 2. To produce the desired reaction: The antibiotics at last began to take effect. take exception To express opposition by argument; object to: took exception to the prosecutor's line of questioning. take five/ten Slang To take a short rest or break, as of five or ten minutes. take for granted 1. To consider as true, real, or forthcoming; anticipate correctly. 2. To underestimate the value of: a publisher who took the editors for granted. take heart To be confident or courageous.
take hold 1. To seize, as by grasping. 2. To become established: The newly planted vines quickly took hold. take it 1. To understand; assume: As I take it, they won't accept the proposal. 2. Informal To endure abuse, criticism, or other harsh treatment: If you can dish it out, you've got to learn to take it. take it on the chin Slang To endure punishment, suffering, or defeat. take it or leave it To accept or reject unconditionally. take it out on Informal To abuse (someone) in venting one's own anger. take kindly to 1. To be receptive to: take kindly to constructive criticism. 2. To be naturally attracted or fitted to; thrive on. take lying down Informal To submit to harsh treatment with no resistance: refused to take the snub lying down. take notice of To pay attention to. take (one's) breath away To put into a state of awe or shock. take (one's) time To act slowly or at one's leisure. take place To happen; occur. take root 1. To become established or fixed. 2. To become rooted. take shape To take on a distinctive form. take sick Chiefly Southern U.S. To become ill. take sides To associate with and support a particular faction, group, cause, or person. take stock 1. To take an inventory. 2. To make an estimate or appraisal, as of resources or of oneself. take stock in To trust, believe in, or attach importance to. take the bench Law To assume a judicial position. take the cake 1. To be the most outrageous or disappointing. 2. To win the prize; be outstanding. take the count 1. To be defeated. 2. Sports To be counted out in boxing. take the fall/hit Slang To incur blame or censure, either willingly or unwillingly: a senior official who took the fall for the failed intelligence operation. take the floor To rise to deliver a formal speech, as to an assembly. take the heat Slang To incur and endure heavy censure or criticism: had a reputation for being able to take the heat in a crisis. take to the cleaners Slang
To take all the money or possessions of, especially by outsmarting or swindling. take up for To support (a person or group, for example) in an argument. take up the cudgels To join in a dispute, especially in defense of a participant. take up with Informal To begin to associate with; consort with: took up with a fast crowd. __________________ go about To set about to do; undertake: Go about your chores in a responsible way. go along To cooperate: They get along by going along. go around 1. To satisfy a demand or requirement: just enough food to go around. 2. To go here and there; move from place to place. 3. To have currency: rumors going around. go at 1. To attack, especially with energy. 2. To approach; undertake: He went at the job with a lot of energy. go by 1. To elapse; pass: as time goes by. 2. To pay a short visit: My parents were away when we went by last week. go down 1. a. To drop below the horizon; set: The sun went down. b. To fall to the ground: The helicopter went down in a ball of fire. c. To sink: The torpedoed battleship went down. d. To experience defeat or ruin. 2. To admit of easy swallowing: a cough syrup that goes down readily. 3. To decrease in cost or value. 4. Chiefly British To leave a university. 5. Slang To occur; happen: "a collection of memorable pieces about the general craziness that was going down in those days" James Atlas. 6. a. To be accepted or tolerated: How will your ideas go down as far as corporate marketing is concerned? b. To come to be remembered in posterity: a debate that will go down as a turning point in the campaign. 7. Vulgar Slang To perform fellatio or cunnilingus. go for 1. Informal To have a special liking for: I really go for progressive jazz. 2. To attack: an opponent who is known to go for the jugular in arguments. 3. To pass for or serve as: a couch that also goes for a bed. go in 1. To take part in a cooperative venture: went in with the others to buy a present. 2. To make an approach, as before an attack: Troops went in at dawn. go into 1. To discuss or investigate: The book goes into classical mythology. 2. To undertake as a profession or course of study: She's going into medicine. go off 1. To undergo detonation; explode. 2. To make a noise; sound: The siren went off at noon. 3. To leave: Don't go off mad. 4. Informal To adhere to the expected course of events or the expected plan: The project went off smoothly.
go 1. 2. a. b. c. 3. go 1. 2. a. b. 3. 4. go 1. 2. go 1. 2. 3. go 1. 2. go 1. 2. 3. go 1. 2.
on To take place; happen: didn't know what was going on. To continue: Life must go on. To keep on doing (something): Don't go on talking. To proceed: She went on to become a senator. Informal To talk volubly: My, you do go on. out To become extinguished. To go outdoors; leave one's residence: He went out at seven. To take part in social life outside the home: goes out a lot. To become unfashionable: High boots went out last year. To undergo structural collapse: The bridge went out. over To gain acceptance or approval: a new style that didn't go over. To examine or review: go over the test scores. through To examine carefully: went through the students' papers. To experience: We went through hell while working on this project. To perform: I went through the sonata in 30 minutes. under To suffer defeat or destruction; fail. To lose consciousness. up To increase in price or value. To be in the process of construction: Office buildings went up all over town. Chiefly British To go to a university. with To date (someone) regularly. To select or choose: decided to go with the pink wallpaper.
carry away To move or excite greatly: was carried away by desire. carry forward Accounting To transfer (an entry) to the next column, page, or book, or to another account. carry off 1. To cause the death of: was carried off by a fever. 2. To handle successfully: carried off the difficult situation with aplomb. carry on 1. To conduct; maintain: carry on a thriving business. 2. To engage in: carry on a love affair. 3. To continue without halting; persevere: carry on in the face of disaster. 4. To behave in an excited, improper, or silly manner. carry out 1. To put into practice or effect: carry out a new policy. 2. To follow or obey: carry out instructions. 3. To bring to a conclusion; accomplish: carried out the mission successfully. carry over 1. Accounting a. To transfer (an account) to the next column, page, or book relating to the same account. b. To retain (merchandise or other goods) for a subsequent, usually the next, season. 2. To deduct (an unused tax credit or a loss, for example) for taxable income of a subsequent period.
3. To persist to another time or situation: The confidence gained in remedial classes carried over into the children's regular school work. carry through 1. To accomplish; complete: carry a project through despite difficulties. 2. To survive; persist: prejudices that have carried through over the centuries. 3. To enable to endure; sustain: a faith that carried them through the ordeal.
Phrasal Verbs: break away 1. To separate or detach oneself, as from a group. 2. To move rapidly away from or ahead of a group: The cyclist broke away from the pack. 3. To discontinue customary practice. break down 1. To cause to collapse; destroy: break down a partition; broke down our resolve. 2. a. To become or cause to become distressed or upset. b. To have a physical or mental collapse. 3. To give up resistance; give way: prejudices that break down slowly. 4. To fail to function; cease to be useful, effective, or operable: The elevator broke down. 5. To render or become weak or ineffective: Opposition to the king's rule gradually broke down his authority. 6. a. To divide into or consider in parts; analyze. b. To be divisible; admit of analysis: The population breaks down into three main groups. 7. To decompose or cause to decompose chemically. 8. Electricity To undergo a breakdown. break in 1. To train or adapt for a purpose. 2. To loosen or soften with use: break in new shoes. 3. To enter premises forcibly or illegally: a prowler who was trying to break in. 4. a. To interrupt a conversation or discussion. b. To intrude. 5. To begin an activity or undertaking: The Senator broke in during the war years. break into 1. To interrupt: "No one would have dared to break into his abstraction" Alan Paton. 2. To begin suddenly: The horse broke into a wild gallop. The child broke into a flood of tears. 3. To enter (a field of activity): broke into broadcast journalism at an early age. break off 1. To separate or become separated, as by twisting or tearing. 2. To stop suddenly, as in speaking. 3. a. To discontinue (a relationship). b. To cease to be friendly. break out 1. To become affected with a skin eruption, such as pimples. 2. To develop suddenly and forcefully: Fighting broke out in the prison cells. 3. a. To ready for action or use: Break out the rifles!
b. To bring forth for consumption: Let's break out the champagne. 4. To emerge or escape. 5. To be separable or classifiable into categories, as data. 6. To isolate (information) from a large body of data. break through To make a sudden, quick advance, as through an obstruction. break up 1. a. To separate or be separated into pieces: She broke up a chocolate bar. The river ice finally broke up. b. To interrupt the uniformity or continuity of: An impromptu visit broke up the long afternoon. 2. To scatter; disperse: The crowd broke up after the game. 3. To cease to function or cause to stop functioning as an organized unit or group: His jazz band broke up. The new CEO broke up the corporation. 4. To bring or come to an end: Guards broke up the fight. They argued, and their friendship broke up. 5. Informal To burst or cause to burst into laughter __________________