Shobdo Logo
OETtackle

tackle

Flag: gbEnglishOxford English Thesaurus

tackle
noun
1 fishing tackle:
gear, equipment, apparatus, outfit, kit, rig, hardware;
tools, implements, instruments, accoutrements, paraphernalia, trappings, contrivances, appurtenances, utensils;
informal things, stuff, clobber, bits and pieces;
archaic equipage.
2 they attached lifting tackle to it, and hauled it on deck:
system of pulleys, hoisting gear, pulley, hoist, block and tackle, crane, winch, davit, windlass, sheave.
3 his run was brought to a halt by the scrum half's tackle:
interception, challenge, block, attack.
verb
1 we welcome the Government's determination to tackle environmental problems:
get to grips with, apply oneself to, address oneself to, address, set about, go about, get to work at, take forward, busy oneself with, set one's hand to, grapple with, approach, take on, attend to, see to, throw oneself into, try to solve, try to deal with, try to cope with, try to sort out;
deal with, take measures about, take care of, pursue, handle, manage;
start on, embark on;
informal get stuck into, have a crack at, have a go at, have a shot at.
2 when I tackled Nina about it, she admitted that she'd bribed one of the chambermaids:
confront, speak to, face (up to), initiate a discussion with, discuss something with, interview, question, cross-examine;
accost, waylay;
remonstrate with.
3 he was stabbed in the chest after he tackled a masked intruder:
confront, face up to, take on, contend with, challenge;
seize, grab, take hold of, grapple with, obstruct, intercept, block, stop;
knock/throw/bring down, floor, fell, rugby-tackle;
informal have a go at.
4 the winger got tackled:
intercept, rugby-tackle, challenge, block, stop, attack.
tackle Oxford Dictionary of English
tackle — OET · Shobdo