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A Writer's Dictionary:

pick people off Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with P » pianos ... picture » pick people off


pick1
verb picked, picking
    tr & intr
    1. To choose or select.
      Thesaurus: choose, select, pick out, decide on, opt for, settle on, elect.
    2. To detach and gather (flowers from a plant, fruit from a tree, etc).
      Thesaurus: gather, collect, accumulate, pluck, pull, cull.
    3. To open (a lock) with a device other than a key, often to gain unauthorized entry.
    4. To get, take or extract whatever is of use or value from something.
      Example: pick a bone clean
      Example: pick someone's brains
    5. To steal money or valuables from (someone's pocket). See also pickpocket.
    6. To undo; to unpick.
      Example: pick a dress to pieces
    7. To make (a hole) by unpicking.
    8. To remove pieces of matter from (one's nose, teeth, a scab, etc) with one's fingernails, etc.
    9. To provoke (a fight, quarrel, etc) with someone.
noun
    1. The best of a group.
      Example: the pick of the bunch
    2. One's own preferred selection.
      Thesaurus: choice, selection, preference, option.
Idiom: have one's pick (take one's pick)
    To keep selecting and rejecting until one is satisfied.
Idiom: pick and choose
    To be over-fussy in one's choice.
Idiom: pick holes in something
    To find fault with it.
Idiom: pick one's way
    To go carefully so as to avoid hazards.
      Example: picked her way through the jungle
Idiom: pick someone's brains
    To ask someone for information, ideas, etc, and then use it as your own.
Idiom: pick someone or something to pieces
    To criticize them or it severely.
Idiom: pick someone up on something
    To point out their error.
Idiom: pick up the pieces
    To have to restore things to normality or make things better after some trouble or disaster.
Idiom: pick up speed
    To increase speed or acelerate gradually.
Etymology: 15c.

Phrasal Verb: pick at something
    To eat only small quantities of (one's food).To keep pulling at (a scab, etc) with one's fingernails.
Phrasal Verb: pick people or things off
    To shoot them.
      Example: picked the snipers off one by one
    To deal with (opposition) bit by bit.
Phrasal Verb: pick on someone
    To blame them unfairly.To bully them.To choose them for an unpleasant job.
Phrasal Verb: pick on something
    To choose it; to light on it.
Phrasal Verb: pick oneself up
    To restore oneself to an upright position after a fall.
Phrasal Verb: pick someone out
    To select them from a group.To recognize or distinguish them among a group or crowd.
Phrasal Verb: pick something out
    To play (a tune) uncertainly, especially by ear.To mark it so as to distinguish it from its surroundings.
      Example: beige walls with the picture rail picked out in brown
Phrasal Verb: pick something over
    To examine (a collection of things) one by one and reject whatever is unwanted.
Phrasal Verb: pick up
    Said of a person, a person's health, or a situation: to recover or improve.
      Example: She picked up after seeing you.
      Example: Sales have picked up now
Phrasal Verb: pick up or pick something up
    To resume.
      Example: pick up where one left off
      Example: pick up the threads of a relationship
      Example: pick up the trail
Phrasal Verb: pick someone up
    To arrest or seize them.
      Example: was picked up by the police
    To go and fetch them from where they are waiting.
      Example: I'll pick you up at the station at 6pm
    To stop one's vehicle for them and give them a lift.
      Example: picked up a hitchhiker
    To approach them and successfully invite them, eg to go home with one, especially with a view to sexual relations. See also pick-up.
Phrasal Verb: pick something up
    To lift or raise it from a surface, from the ground, etc.To learn or acquire (a habit, skill, language, etc) over a time.To notice or become aware of it.
      Example: picked up a faint odour
    To obtain or acquire it casually, by chance, etc.
      Example: pick up a bargain
      Example: pick up an infection
    To go and fetch (something waiting to be collected).To receive (a signal, programme, etc).To refer back in conversation or discourse to (a point previously made), in order to deal with it further.To agree to pay (a bill, etc).
      Example: pick up the tab
Phrasal Verb: pick something up, off, out
    To lift, remove, detach or extract it.
      Example: picked a crumb off the carpet


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