take
verb
1 Anna smiled as she took his hand:
lay hold of, take hold of, get hold of, get into one's hands;
grasp, grip, clasp, clutch, grab.
▷antonyms give.
2 he took an envelope from his inside pocket:
remove, pull, draw, withdraw, extract, fish;
confiscate, take possession of.
▷antonyms give.
3 the following passage is taken from my book “Managing Stress”:
extract, quote, cite, excerpt, derive, abstract, reproduce, copy, cull, choose.
5 many thousands of prisoners were taken:
capture, seize, catch, take captive, arrest, apprehend, take into custody;
carry off, abduct, lay hold of;
trap, snare.
▷antonyms free, liberate.
6 these thieving toerags have taken my car:
steal, remove, appropriate, misappropriate, make off with, pilfer, purloin, abstract, dispossess someone of;
informal filch, swipe, snaffle, walk off with;
British, informal pinch, nick;
rare peculate.
▷antonyms give.
7 take the bottom number from the total:
subtract, deduct, remove, take away/off;
discount;
informal knock off, minus.
▷antonyms add.
9 I have just taken a room in a nearby house:
rent, lease, hire, charter;
reserve, book, make a reservation for, arrange for, engage.
11 I'd take childbirth today over what my grandmother had to go through:
pick, choose, select, decide on, settle on, fix on, single out;
prefer, favor, opt for, plump for, vote for, elect.
▷antonyms refuse, turn down.
12 take, for instance, the English word “one”:
consider, ponder, contemplate, think about, weigh up, give thought to, mull over, deliberate over, examine, study, cogitate about, chew over, meditate over, ruminate over.
13 he takes “The Observer”:
subscribe to, pay a subscription to, buy regularly, read regularly, read every day/week/month.
14 a nurse took his temperature:
ascertain, determine, establish, measure, find out, discover;
calculate, compute, count, quantify, evaluate, rate, assess, appraise, gauge.
15 she started to take notes:
write, note (down), make a note of, set down, jot (down), scribble, scrawl, take down, record, register, document, minute, put in writing, commit to paper.
16 I took it back to London with me:
bring, carry, bear, transport, convey, move, transfer, shift, haul, drag, lug, cart, ferry;
informal tote.
17 she let the priest take her home:
escort, accompany, help, assist, show, lead, show someone the way, lead the way, conduct, guide, see, usher, steer, pilot, shepherd, convey.
18 he took the New Haven line to Bridgeport:
travel on, travel by, journey on, go via;
use, make use of, utilize.
19 the station takes its name from the nearby lake:
derive, get, obtain, come by, acquire, pick up, be given.
20 she took the prize for best individual speaker:
receive, obtain, gain, get, acquire, collect, accept, be given, be presented with, be awarded, have conferred on one;
secure, procure, come by, win, earn, pick up, walk away/off with, carry off;
informal land, bag, net, scoop, cop.
21 she feared that I might take the chance to postpone the ceremony:
act on, take advantage of, capitalize on, use, exploit, make the most of, leap at, jump on, pounce on, seize (on), grasp, grab, snatch, accept, put to advantage, profit from, turn to account, cash in on.
▷antonyms miss, ignore.
22 he took great pleasure in creating his own individual style:
derive, draw, acquire, obtain, get, gain, extract, procure;
experience, undergo, feel, encounter, know, come into contact with, face.
23 Elizabeth took the news of my firing badly:
receive, respond to, react to, meet, greet;
deal with, cope with.
24 do you take me for a fool?:
regard as, consider to be, view as, look on as, see as, believe to be, think of as, reckon to be, imagine to be, deem to be, hold to be, judge to be.
25 I take it that you are George Tenison:
assume, presume, suppose, imagine, expect, believe, reckon, think, be of the opinion, gather, dare say, trust, surmise, deduce, guess, conjecture, fancy, suspect;
take for granted, take as read.
26 I take your point:
understand, grasp, get, comprehend, apprehend, see, follow, take in;
accept, appreciate, accept/acknowledge/admit the validity of, recognize, sympathize with, agree with.
27 Shirley was rather taken with this idea:
captivate, enchant, charm, delight, attract, win over, fascinate, bewitch, beguile, enthrall, entrance, lure, infatuate, seduce, dazzle, hypnotize, mesmerize;
please, amuse, divert, entertain, gladden, satisfy, gratify;
informal tickle someone pink, tickle someone's fancy.
28 I can't take much more of this business:
endure, bear, suffer, tolerate, stand, put up with, stomach, brook, abide, carry, submit to, accept, permit, allow, admit, countenance, support, shoulder;
Scottish thole.
29 applicants may be asked to take a test:
perform, execute, effect, discharge, carry out, accomplish, fulfill, complete, conduct, implement, do, make, have;
rare effectuate.
30 I went on to take English, History, and French:
study, learn, be taught, have lessons in;
read up on, work at, apply oneself to, acquire a knowledge of, gain an understanding of, grasp, master;
take up, pursue;
British read;
informal do.
31 the journey should take a little over six hours:
last, continue for, go on for, carry on for, keep on for, run on for, endure for;
require, call for, need, necessitate, entail, involve.
32 it would take an expert marksman with a high-powered rifle to hit him:
require, need, necessitate, demand, call for, entail, involve.
34 we tried to bring the children up to think this way, but somehow it did not take:
be effective, have/take effect, take hold, take root, be efficacious, be productive, be in force, be in operation, be efficient, be effectual, be useful;
work, operate, succeed, function.
□ take after□ take a seat (also take a chair) □ take against□ take something apart□ take someone or something apart□ take someone back□ take something back□ take something down
Jenny takes after her mother:
resemble, look like, be like, be similar to, bear a resemblance to, have the look of;
remind one of, put one in mind of, make one think of, cause one to remember, recall, conjure up, suggest, evoke, call up;
informal favor, be a chip off the old block, be the spitting image of.
1 I take back every word I said:
retract, withdraw, renounce, disclaim, disown, unsay, disavow, recant, abjure, repudiate, override;
backpedal.
▷antonyms stand by.
2 I have to take the keys back to the steward:
□ take someone by surprisereturn, carry back, bring back, fetch back, give back, hand back, send back, restore, remit.
▷antonyms keep, hang onto.
executives were taken by surprise when sales dropped off late last year:
take aback, surprise, shock, stun, stagger, astound, astonish, startle;
dumbfound, daze, nonplus, stop someone in their tracks, stupefy, take someone's breath away;
shake (up), jolt, throw, unnerve, disconcert, disturb, disquiet, unsettle, discompose, bewilder;
informal flabbergast, knock for six, knock sideways, knock out, floor, strike dumb.
1 the policeman took down her particulars:
□ take someone in□ take something in□ take someone in hand□ take something in hand□ take it out of□ take offwrite down, note down, make a note of, jot down, set down, mark down, record, put on record, commit to paper, put in black and white, register, draft, document, minute, pen.
1 I walked up to the horse, but he took off at a great speed:
□ take someone off□ take oneself off□ take something offrun away, run off, flee, abscond, take flight, decamp, disappear, leave, go, depart, make off, bolt, make a run/break for it, take to one's heels, beat a hasty retreat, make a quick exit, make one's getaway, escape, head for the hills;
informal split, beat it, clear off, clear out, skedaddle, vamoose, hightail it, light out.
▷antonyms stay put.
1 take the lid off the pot and gently stir the rice with a wooden spoon:
□ take on□ take someone on□ take something on□ take someone out□ take someone or something outdetach, remove, pull off;
cut off, clip off, hack off, chop off, prune off, nip off;
extract, sever, separate.
▷antonyms leave on.
informal
□ take something out□ take something over□ take one's time□ take tothey were taken out by a sniper:
kill, murder, assassinate, put to death, do away with, put an end to, get rid of, dispatch, execute, finish off, eliminate, exterminate, terminate;
destroy, obliterate, annihilate;
informal do in, bump off, rub out, wipe out, hit, mow down, top;
literary slay.
1 after being mugged a few months back, he had taken to carrying his money in different parts of his clothing:
□ take something upmake a habit of, resort to, turn to, have recourse to, begin, start;
formal commence.
▷antonyms stop.
1 we took up our bags and left:
pick up, grab, scoop up, gather up, snatch up, swoop up;
carry;
lift up, raise, uplift, heft, heave, elevate.
▷antonyms put down, drop.
2 in the thirties he took up abstract painting:
become involved in, become interested in, engage in, participate in, take part in, practice, follow;
begin, start;
formal commence.
▷antonyms give up, drop.
3 she found that the meetings took up all her time:
consume, fill, absorb, use, use up, occupy;
cover, extend over;
waste, squander, go through.
4 her cousin took up the story:
□ take up withresume, recommence, restart, begin again, carry on, continue, carry on with, pick up, return to.
noun
2 he is determined to increase the state's tax take:
revenue, income, gain, profit, money received, payments received;
takings, proceeds, returns, receipts, profits, winnings, pickings, earnings, spoils;
in sport gate money, purse;
British, informal bunce.