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  1. Dictionary
    take
    /tāk/

    verb

    noun

    • 1. a scene or sequence of sound or vision photographed or recorded continuously at one time: "he completed a particularly difficult scene in two takes" Similar scenesequencefilmed sequenceclip
    • 2. an amount of something gained or acquired from one source or in one session: "the take from commodity taxation" Similar catchhaulbagyield

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. If you take someone or something to be something, or if you take someone or something for something, you accept or believe that they are that thing: These creatures are generally taken to be descended from primitive fishes .

  3. If you take someone or something to be something, or if you take someone or something for something, you accept or believe that they are that thing: These creatures are generally taken to be descended from primitive fishes .

  4. WITHDRAW definition: 1. to take or move out or back, or to remove: 2. to stop talking to other people and start…. Learn more.

  5. take verb [T] (NEED) A2. If something takes a particular amount of time, or a particular quality, you need that amount of time or that quality in order to be able to do it: [ + to do sth ] It's taken me three days to get here.

  6. TAKEAWAY definition: 1. a main message or piece of information that you learn from something you hear or read: 2. a…. Learn more.

  7. Contents. TAKE SOMETHING IN definition: 1. to understand completely the meaning or importance of something: 2. to include something: 3…. Learn more.

  8. take on something. phrase. an opinion about something: We'd love to hear your take on this issue. Most people would be upset at this sort of criticism, but Louis has a different take on it. He was eager to share his take on the outcome of the recent elections. She had a really weird take on what happened.

  9. TAKEN definition: 1. past participle of take 2. believing something to be deserving of respect or admiration: 3…. Learn more.

  10. Take means ‘move with something or someone from where the speaker or listener is to a different place’: Can you take this to the post office for me, Neil? (Neither the speaker nor the listener is at the post office.)

  11. See all examples of took. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.

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