a small animal with a large black head and a long tail that lives in water. It is the young form of a frog .
tag / tag /
1 [ count ] a small piece of paper or material attached to something, which tells you about it
looked at the price tag to see how much the dress cost.
[ noncount ] a children's game in which one child chases the others and tries to touch one of them
tail Ф / ted /
[ count ] the long, thin part at the end of an animal's body
[ count ] the part at the back of something
tails [ plural ] the side of a coin that does not have the head of a person on it
—ANTONYM heads
tai • lor / ' teilar/
a person whose job is to make clothes for men
tail • pipe / ' teilpaip/
take © / teik /
( takes , tak - ing , took / tuk / has tak - en / ' teikan / )
to move something or go with someone to another place
to put your hand around something and hold it
to remove something from a place or a person, often without asking them
to agree to have something; to accept something If you take my advice, you'll forget all about him. Do you take credit cards?
to need an amount of time
to travel in a bus, train, etc.
to swallow or put a medicine or drug into your body
a word that you use with many nouns to talk about doing something
take after someone to be or look like an older member
of your family
take something away to remove someone or something
take something back to return something to the place
you got it from
take off When an airplane takes off , it leaves the ground and starts to fly.
—ANTONYM land
take something off
to remove clothes from your body
—ANTONYM put something on
to have time as a vacation, not working
take over ; take something over to get control of
something or responsibility for something
take up something to use or fill time or space
take • off / teikof ; teikaf /
the time when an airplane leaves the ground and starts to fly —ANTONYM landing
take • out / ' teikaut / ( also take-out )
[noncount]
food that you buy already cooked from a restaurant to eat somewhere else
tale / teil/