take
suomi-englanti sanakirjatake englannista suomeksi
otos, kohtaus, otto
voittaa
ottaa
käyttää
viedä
hyväksyä, sietää
ottaa vuokralle, ottaa palvelukseen
myyntitulot, voitto
ottaa vastaan
poistaa
tulla
tilata
kuljettaa
vetää
vaatia, kestää
edellyttää
ryhtyä
opiskella
suoria
omaksua
siirtää
alkaa, ruveta
ottaa valtaansa, vallata
ajaa
tulla sairaaksi
hakeutua
ottaa tähtäimeen
ottaa esimerkiksi
mennä
Verbi
ottaa, ottaa haltuunsa">ottaa haltuunsa, vallata, valloittaa
saada}}
voida maksaa|lit=can pay, to be able to pay">voida maksaa|lit=can pay, to be able to pay; kelvata what is taken is the subject, who or what takes in the allative or adessive case; hyväksyä, ottaa vastaan, ottaa, saada}}
ottaa}}
ottaa (esimerkiksi)">ottaa (esimerkiksi)
Substantiivi
take englanniksi
To get into one's hands, possession{{, or control, with or without force.
(syn)
(ux)
(RQ:Hakewill Apologie)
(RQ:Heywood Londini Speculum)
(RQ:Allingham China Governess)
(quote-book)
(coi)
(RQ:Marlowe Tamburlaine)
(RQ:Hemingway Farewell to Arms)
(RQ:Orwell Homage)
To catch or get possession of (fish or game).
(RQ:Darwin et al Voyages)
To catch the ball; ''especially'' as a wicket-keeper and after the batsman has missed or edged it.
To appropriate or transfer into one's own possession, sometimes by physically carrying off.
To exact.
(RQ:Melville Mardi)
(RQ:Tagore Sadhana)
To receive or accept (something, especially something which was given).
(ant)
(RQ:KJV)
(quote-song)|date=7 March 1980|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ilsv0C1-aBw|text=You were lonely for a manI said, "Take me as I am"'Cause you might enjoy some madness for a while
To receive or accept (something) as payment or compensation.
(RQ:Lyly Mother Bombie)
(RQ:Ruskin Unto This Last)
(RQ:Locke Conduct)
To receive into some relationship.
To accept, be given (rightly or wrongly), or assume (especially as if by right).
To remove.
(RQ:South Five Volumes)
(RQ:Woodward Fossils)
(RQ:Poe Raven)
To subtract.
To have sex with.
(quote-newsgroup)
(quote-av)
(RQ:Dickens Old Curiosity Shop)
(RQ:Black Macleod)
(RQ:Beckford Vathek)
(RQ:Landon Ethel Churchill)
(ux)
(RQ:Salusbury Mathematical Collections) We can think no other, if we do but conſider the way he taketh to confute their aſſertion; the confutation of which confiſts in the demolition of buildings, and the toſſing of ſtones, living creatures and men themſelves up into the Air.
(coi)
(RQ:Harte Flip)
(RQ:Burke Noble Lord)
(RQ:Huxley Along the Road)
etc. To lead (to a place); to serve as a means of reaching.
(RQ:Froude Carlyle)
To pass (or attempt to pass) through or around.
(RQ:Coleridge Poems) ſhall call the charmer (smallcaps) his Bride, / And (smallcaps) tickle (smallcaps)'s ribleſs ſide!
(RQ:Churchill Celebrity)
(RQ:Tolkien Hobbit)
To go.
To use as a means of transportation.
(RQ:Reade Simpleton)
(RQ:Disraeli Endymion)
To obtain or receive regularly by (paid) subscription.
To receive (medicine or drugs) into one's body, e.g. by inhalation or swallowing; to ingest.
(RQ:Welsh Trainspotting)
To consume (food or drink).
(RQ:Besant Ivory Gate)
(RQ:Heller Catch-22)
To experience or feel.
(RQ:Tusser Good Husbandrie)
(RQ:Marston Scourge of Villanie)
(RQ:Lincoln Pratt's Patients)
To submit to; to endure (without humor, resentment, or physical failure).
(quote-av) and, kind of the ultimate example of the plans for the R-class was to refit them with huge bulges, almost monitor-style bulges, to be able to take multiple air-dropped torpedo attacks, but also to just, literally, slap on four inches of deck armor.
(RQ:Blackmore Perlycross)
To participate in.
To regard in a specified way.
(RQ:Maxwell Mirror and the Lamp)
To conclude or form (a decision or an opinion) in the mind.
To understand (especially in a specified way).
(quote-journal)
(RQ:Guardian)
(RQ:Rowe Tamerlane)
(RQ:Udall Ralph Roister Doister)
(RQ:Trollope Australia)
(RQ:Tillotson Sermons)
(RQ:Wiseman Chirurgicall Treatises)
To come upon or catch (in a particular state or situation).
To captivate or charm; to gain or secure the interest or affection of.
To absorb or be impregnated by (dye, ink{{, etc.); to be susceptible to being treated by (polish{{, etc.).
To in (water).
To require.
(RQ:Harper Lee Mockingbird)
(RQ:Rushdie Fury)
(RQ:Economist)
To proceed to fill.
To fill, require, or use up (time or space).
(RQ:Grey 30,000)
(RQ:Defoe Roxana) Journey; for that I had kept him Honeſt; (..)
(RQ:Dante Cayley Divine Comedy)
(RQ:Wilde Pomegranates)
To assume or perform (a form or role).
To assume (a form).
To perform (a role).
To assume and undertake the duties of (a job, an office{{, etc.).
To bind oneself by.
(RQ:Paine Rights of Man)
To go into, through, or along.
(RQ:Fletcher Shakespeare Two Noble Kinsmen)
To have and use one's recourse to.
To ascertain or determine by measurement, examination or inquiry.
(RQ:Swift Gulliver's Travels)
To write down; to get in, or as if in, writing.
(RQ:Wodehouse Bill the Conqueror)
To make (a photograph, film, or other reproduction of something).
To make a picture, photograph{{, etc. of (a person, scene{{, etc.).
To deal with.
To consider in a particular way, or to consider as an example.
(ux) etc.
To decline to swing at (a pitched ball); to refrain from hitting at, and allow to pass.
To accept as an input to a relation.
To have to be used with (a certain grammatical form{{, etc.).
(ux)
To accept (zero or more arguments).
To get or accept (something) into one's possession.
To engage, take hold or have effect.
(RQ:Bacon Sylva Sylvarum)
etc. To adhere or be absorbed properly.
etc. To begin to grow after being grafted or planted; to root, take hold.
(quote-book)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=D. Van Nostrand|year=1884|page=179|pageurl=https://books.google.ca/books?id=cS_QAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA178-IA3|passage=The cradles are supported under their centres by shores, on which the keel takes. The ends of the cradles are hinged, and can drop down clear when the boat is being hoisted or lowered.
To catch; to engage.
To win acceptance, favor or favorable reception; to charm people.
(quote-book)|edition=second|genre=play|location=London|publisher=(...) Tonson|Jacob Tonſon(nb...)|year=1716|year_published=1741|page=unnumbered|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_eighteenth-century_the-drummer-or-the-hau_addison-joseph_1716/page/n5/mode/1up|passage=Each Wit may praiſe it, for his own dear Sake, / And hint He writ it, if the Thing ſhowd take.
To become; to be affected in a specified way.
To be able to be accurately or beautifully photographed.
1970, Harry Shaw, ''Errors in English and ways to correct them'', page 93: In the sentence, "He took and beat the horse unmercifully," took and should be omitted entirely. (non-gloss)
(RQ:Meredith Richard Feverel) and go and do? He takes, and goes, and hangs unsel', and turns us out o' 'ploy. God warn't above the Devil then, I thinks, or I can't make out the reckonin'."
(quote-book) I went and kicked the door in and took care of some other people. Then I took and went back to the hotel—" ¶ "The hotel where you live, right? The Gilbert Hotel?" ¶ "Right. I took and went back to the hotel, took a shower, went out and talked to a police officer—" ¶ "A police officer. Sheriff's deputy? LAPD? What's his name?" ¶ "Can't recall. Jim. Charlie, could be."
(RQ:Tyndale NT)
To give or deliver (a blow, to someone); to strike or hit.
To visit; to include in a course of travel.
(quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) J. Sowle,(nb...)|year=1677|year_published=1726|volume=I|page=60|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/collectionofwork01penn/page/60/mode/1up|passage=Now about a Year ſince, ''R. B.'' and ''B. F.'' took that City in the Way from ''Frederickſtadt'' to ''Amſterdam'', and gave them a Viſit: In which they informed them ſomewhat of ''Friend's Principles'', and recommended the Teſtimony of TRUTH to them, as both a nearer and more certain Thing than the utmoſt of ''De Labadie''{{'s Doctrine. They left them tender and loving.
(quote-book)|location=Dublin|publisher=(...) John Jones,(nb...)|year=1793|year_published=1805|page=441|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/liferevjohnwesl00whitgoog/page/n439/mode/1up|passage=But it seems that he did not attend to this circumstance at present; for in May, he set out again for ''Epworth'', and took Manchester in his way, to see his friend Mr. ''Clayton'', who had now left ''Oxford''.
To portray in a painting.
(RQ:Dryden Miscellaneous Works),(nb...)|volume=II|page=216|passage=Beauty alone could beauty take ſo right: / Her dreſs, her ſhape, her matchleſs grace, / Were all obferv'd, as well as heavenly face.
(used in phrasal verbs)
The or an act of taking.
(quote-book)|publisher=(publisher)|Doubleday|year=2009|page=321|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/theirfinesthoura0000evan/page/321/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-385-61423-8|passage='I saw you in Norfolk doing twenty-odd takes with that fisherman chap and it looked perfect in the rushes.'
Something that is taken; a haul.
Money that is taken in, (legal or illegal) proceeds, income; profits.
(RQ:NYT)
The or a quantity of fish, game animals or pelts, etc which have been taken at one time; catch.
An interpretation or view, opinion or assessment; perspective; a statement expressing such a position.
(RQ:Wired)
(quote-web)
(RQ:New Yorker)
(RQ:WaPo)
(RQ:Rolling Stone)
A scene recorded (filmed) at one time, without an interruption or break; a recording of such a scene.
A recording of a musical performance made during an uninterrupted single recording period.
A visible (facial) response to something, especially something unexpected; a facial gesture in response to an event.
(quote-book)|publisher=iUniverse, Inc.|year=2007|page=138|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/catchfallingstar0000mcbr/page/138/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-595-44510-3|passage=Biddy did a {{'take{{' and stared at Mandy speechless for a moment—then she fled back to the kitchen.
An instance of successful inoculation/vaccination.
A catch of the ball (in cricket, especially one by the wicket-keeper).
The quantity of copy given to a compositor at one time.
(quote-av)>
(zh-classifier)
{{zh-co|一ta{i}ke{1}過|in one attempt|C
(ja-romanization of)
a turkey
power switch.
(alt form)
(alt form): (infl of)
(alternative form of)
''se-take'' — ''I want''