inglés » ruso

took [tʊk] V.

took pret. of take

Véase también: take

I . take [teɪk] SUST.

1. take no pl. (receipts):

2. take (filming):

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

to be on the take ingl. am. coloq.

II . take <took, taken> [teɪk] V. trans.

2. take (consume):

3. take (hold):

6. take (hold onto):

15. take ingl. brit. (score):

16. take ingl. brit., ingl. austr. (teach):

19. take (use for travel):

I . take [teɪk] SUST.

1. take no pl. (receipts):

2. take (filming):

locuciones, giros idiomáticos:

to be on the take ingl. am. coloq.

II . take <took, taken> [teɪk] V. trans.

2. take (consume):

3. take (hold):

6. take (hold onto):

15. take ingl. brit. (score):

16. take ingl. brit., ingl. austr. (teach):

19. take (use for travel):

take aback V. trans.

1. take aback (surprise):

I . take away V. trans.

2. take away (deprive of):

3. take away (bring away with):

4. take away (make leave):

5. take away (lessen):

6. take away ingl. brit., ingl. austr. (buy to eat elsewhere):

7. take away (subtract from):

8. take away mat:

take back V. trans.

1. take back (return to original place):

2. take back (accept back):

3. take back (accompany a person):

6. take back (carry to a past time):

7. take back (remind):

take down V. trans.

1. take down (bring lower):

2. take down (remove from high place):

5. take down (write):

6. take down coloq. (depress):

7. take down coloq. (make less confident):

I . take off V. trans.

1. take off (remove from):

3. take off coloq. (force to give up):

4. take off coloq. (leave):

5. take off (bring away):

8. take off (subtract):

9. take off (stop giving):

10. take off (stop running):

11. take off (stop showing):

12. take off ingl. brit. (imitate):

II . take off V. intr.

1. take off (leave the ground) AERO.:

2. take off coloq. (leave):

3. take off coloq. (flee):

4. take off (have success):

I . take on V. trans.

1. take on (agree to try):

2. take on (employ):

3. take on (acquire):

4. take on (hire):

5. take on (fight):

take-in [ˈteɪkɪn] SUST.

take-off [ˈteɪkɒf, ingl. am. -ɑ:f] SUST.

1. take-off AERO.:

2. take-off ingl. brit., ingl. austr. (imitation):

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
The movie itself is a fictional account of events that took place during actual operations in Grenada.
en.wikipedia.org
I was down with cold and catarrh before the game and took medication which made me weak during the match, and was substituted.
www.goal.com
I took the announcement matter-of-factly, although wondering what it could be all about.
opinion.inquirer.net
This took the shine out of the rehabilitation package.
www.thehindu.com
She took his reverse-charge phone calls at home and sent food parcels.
www.smh.com.au
The group took their name from a section in a greeting card display.
en.wikipedia.org
The endurance squad were able to turn the flying start to their advantage and took a clean victory over the sprinters.
en.wikipedia.org
At 1:15 am they and four renegade sailors took over the ship.
en.wikipedia.org
He took the most important decisions to avoid repeat accidents and informed the government of the situation in the disaster area.
en.wikipedia.org
He took her as his common-law wife and later trusted her with running his plantation when he was away on business.
en.wikipedia.org

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