given Definition
give
verb gave, given, giving
- 1. To transfer ownership of something; to transfer possession of something temporarily.
- Example: gave him my watch
- Example: Give me your bags
- Example: give advice
- Example: give medicine
- Thesaurus: bestow, confer, impart, dispense.
- Example: Cows give milk
- Example: give a smile
- Example: She gave a lecture on beetles
- Example: gave £20 for it
- Thesaurus: grant, bequeath, donate, award, contribute.
6. To make a donation.
- Example: Please give generously
- Example: give one's life
- Example: gave up his day off to finish the job on time
- Form: give something up (also)
- Example: gives me pain
9. To yield or break.
- Example: give under pressure
- Example: give a party
- Example: four into twenty gives five
- Example: was given 20 years
- To agree to or admit something; to concede.
- Example: I'll give you that
- Thesaurus: concede, grant, allow.
15. sport.
- To declare someone to be a specified thing.
- Example: He was given offside
- 1. Capacity to yield; flexibility.
- Example: a board with plenty of give
- To make mutual concessions.
- colloq
To respond to an attack with equal energy, force and effect.
- colloq
I prefer.
- Example: Give me jazz any day
- colloq
Allowing for a (specified) margin of error.
- Example: We have all the money, give or take a pound
- To make someone think that or to give the impression that ...
- To assume that they are dead or lost, etc, after abandoning hope.
- colloq
To die.
- To allow priority.
- To collapse under pressure.
- Thesaurus: collapse, fall, crumble, crumple, break, cave in, sag, crack; Antonym: withstand.
- To allow oneself to be affected by it.
- Example: give way to tears
- What is happening, the matter, etc? For many other idioms containing give, see under the next significant word in the idiom.
Phrasal Verb: give someone away
- To betray them.To present (the bride) to the bridegroom at a wedding ceremony.
- To hand it over as a gift.To sell it at an incredibly low price.To allow (a piece of information) to become known, usually by accident.
- To yield to them; to admit defeat.
- To produce or emit (eg a smell).
- Said of a passage, etc: to lead or be an opening to it.
- Example: a terrace giving on to the lawn
- To break down or come to an end.
- Example: Their resistance gave out
- To announce or distribute it.To emit (a sound, smell, etc).
- Usually as a command: to stop (doing it).
- Example: Give over shouting!
- Example: Give over! I've had enough of your moaning
- To transfer it.To set it aside or devote it to some purpose.
- Example: The morning was given over to discussing the budgets
- To admit defeat.
- To surrender.
- To devote oneself to (a cause, etc).
- To surrender or hand over (a wanted person, a weapon, etc).
- To renounce or quit (a habit, etc).
- Example: give up smoking
- To stop making the effort to achieve it.
- Example: gave up trying to talk sense to them
given
adj
- 1. Stated or specified.
2. Admitted, assumed or accepted as true.
- Thesaurus: granted, admitted, agreed.
- 1. Accepting (a specified thing) as a basis for discussion; assuming.
- Example: given his illegitimacy
- Example: given that he is illegitimate
- 1. Something that is admitted, assumed or accepted as true.
- Example: His illegitimacy is a given
- 1. Past participle of give
- Prone to it; having it as a habit
- Example: given to biting his nails
- Thesaurus: inclined to, liable to, prone to, apt to, likely to, disposed to.
