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![Give - definition of give by The Free Dictionary](http://img.tfd.com/wn/F4/C0DCB-give.png)
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1. To make a present of: We gave her flowers for her birthday. 2. To place in the hands of; pass: Give me the scissors. b. To accord or tender to another: Give him your confidence. c. To put temporarily at the disposal of: gave them the cottage for a week. d. To entrust to another, usually for a specified reason: gave me the keys for safekeeping. e. To communicate, convey, or offer for conveyance: Give him my best wishes. Give us the latest news. a. To endure the loss of; sacrifice: gave her son to the war; gave her life for her country. b. To devote or apply completely: gives herself to her work. c. To furnish or contribute: gave their time to help others. d. To offer in good faith; pledge: Give me your word. a. To be a source of; afford: His remark gave offense. Music gives her pleasure. b. To cause to catch or be subject to (a disease or bodily condition): The draft gave me a cold. c. To guide or direct, as by persuasion or behavior. Used with an infinitive phrase: You gave me to imagine you approved of my report. a. To yield to physical force: The sail gave during the storm. b. To collapse from force or pressure: The roof gave under the weight of the snow. c. To yield to change: Both sides will have to give on some issues. 1. To allow to be known; declare publicly: gave out the bad news. 2. To send forth; emit: gave out a steady buzzing. 3. To distribute: gave out the surplus food. 4. To stop functioning; fail. 5. To become used up or exhausted; run out: Their determination finally gave out. 1. To hand over; entrust. 2. To devote to a particular purpose or use: gave the day over to merrymaking. 3. To surrender (oneself) completely; abandon: finally gave myself over to grief. 4. To cause an activity to stop: ordered the combatants to give over. 1. To retreat or withdraw. 2. To yield the right of way: gave way to an oncoming car. 3. To relinquish ascendancy or position: as day gives way slowly to night. 4. To collapse from or as if from physical pressure: The ladder gave way. 5. To yield to urging or demand; give in. 6. To abandon oneself: give way to hysteria. vb (mainly tr) , gives, giving, gave (ɡeɪv) or given (ˈɡɪvən) 1. (also intr) to present or deliver voluntarily (something that is one's own) to the permanent possession of another or others 2. (often foll by for) to transfer (something that is one's own, esp money) to the possession of another as part of an exchange: to give fifty pounds for a painting. 3. to place in the temporary possession of another: I gave him my watch while I went swimming. 4. (when: intr, foll by of) to grant, provide, or bestow: give me some advice. 5. to administer: to give a reprimand. 6. to award or attribute: to give blame, praise, etc. 7. to be a source of: he gives no trouble. 8. to impart or communicate: to give news; give a person a cold. 9. to utter or emit: to give a shout. 10. to perform, make, or do: the car gave a jolt and stopped. 11. to sacrifice or devote: he gave his life for his country. 12. to surrender: to give place to others. 13. to concede or yield: I will give you this game. 14. (intr) to happen: what gives?. 15. (often foll by to) to cause; lead: she gave me to believe that she would come. 16. (foll by for) to value (something) at: I don't give anything for his promises. 17. (Theatre) to perform or present as an entertainment: to give a play. 18. to propose as a toast: I give you the Queen. 19. (intr) to yield or break under force or pressure: this surface will give if you sit on it; his courage will never give. 20. give as good as one gets to respond to verbal or bodily blows to at least an equal extent as those received 21. (Military) give battle to commence fighting 22. (Medicine) to bear (offspring) 23. to produce, originate, or create (an idea, plan, etc) 24. give a person five give a person some skin to greet or congratulate someone by slapping raised hands 25. give ground to draw back or retreat 26. give it up for someone to applaud someone 27. give someone one Brit to have sex with someone 28. give rise to to be the cause of 29. give me I prefer: give me hot weather any day!. 30. give or take plus or minus: three thousand people came, give or take a few hundred. 31. give way See way24 32. give a person what for to punish or reprimand a person severely 1. to present voluntarily and without expecting compensation: to give a birthday present to someone. 2. to hand to someone: Give me that plate, please. 3. to place in someone's care: I gave the folders to your assistant. 4. to grant (permission, opportunity, etc.) to someone: Give me a chance. 5. to impart or communicate: to give advice; to give a cold to someone. 6. to set forth or show; present; offer: to give no reason for one's actions. 7. to pay or transfer possession to another in exchange for something: They gave five dollars for the picture. 8. to furnish, provide, or proffer: to give evidence. 9. to provide as an entertainment or social function: to give a Halloween party. 10. to administer: to give medicine to a patient. 11. to put forth, emit, or utter; issue: to give a cry. 12. to assign or admit as a basis of calculation or reasoning (usu. used passively): These facts being given, the theory makes sense. 13. to produce, yield, or afford: to give good results. 14. to make, do, or perform: to give a lurch. 15. to perform or present publicly: to give a concert. 16. to cause; be responsible for (usu. fol. by an infinitive): They gave me to understand that you would be there. 17. to care about something to the value or extent of (something signifying “even a little bit”): I don't give a hoot about their opinion. Frankly, I don't give a damn! 18. to relinquish or sacrifice: to give one's life for a cause. 19. to convey or transmit: Give Grandma my love. 20. to assign or allot: They gave him the nickname “Scooter.” 21. to bestow (the object of one's choice), as if by providence: Give me the wide open spaces anytime. 22. to connect, as through a switchboard: Give me 235-7522. 23. to present to an audience: Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the governor of Texas. 24. to attribute or ascribe: to give the devil his due. 25. to cause: Strawberries give me a rash. 26. to apply fully or freely; devote: to give one's attention to a problem. 27. to award by verdict or after consideration: A decision was given for the defendant. 28. to inflict as a punishment on another; impose a sentence of: The judge gave him ten years. 29. to pledge, offer as a pledge, or execute and deliver: She gave him her word. 30. to propose as the subject of a toast (fol. by an indirect object): Ladies and gentlemen, I give you our country. 31. to bear to a man; deliver (fol. by an indirect object): She gave him a beautiful baby boy. 32. to sire upon a woman; father (fol. by an indirect object): He gave her two children in four years. 33. to concede or grant, as a point in an argument. 34. to make a gift or gifts; contribute: to give to the United Way. 35. to yield somewhat, as to influence or force; compromise: Each side must give on some points. 36. to yield somewhat when subjected to weight, force, pressure, etc.: A horsehair mattress doesn't give much. 37. to collapse; break down; fall apart: The old chair gave when I sat on it. 38. to be warm and open in relationships with others: a withdrawn person who doesn't know how to give. 39. Informal. to divulge information: Okay now, give! What happened? 40. to afford a view or passage; face, open, or lead (usu. fol. by on, onto, etc.): This door gives onto the hallway. a. to put into the care or custody of; transfer. b. to submit fully: She gave herself over to tears. c. to devote to a specified activity: The day was given over to relaxing. d. to cease; stop: to give over complaining. syn: give, confer, grant, present mean that something concrete or abstract is bestowed on one person by another. give is the general word: to give someone a book. confer usu. means to give as an honor or as a favor; it implies courteous and gracious giving: to confer a medal. grant is usu. limited to the idea of acceding to a request or fulfilling an expressed wish; it often involves a formal act or legal procedure: to grant a prayer; to grant immunity. present, a more formal word than give, usu. implies a certain ceremony in the giving: to present an award. Give is a very common verb that has several meanings. Its past tense is gave. Its -ed participle is given. Give usually takes an indirect object. For some meanings of give, the indirect object must go in front of the direct object. For other meanings, it can go either in front of the direct object or after it. Give is often used to describe physical actions. When you use give like this, put the indirect object in front of the direct object. For example, say 'He gave the ball a kick'. Don't say 'He gave a kick to the ball'. He gave the door a push. Ana gave Bal's hand a squeeze. Give is also used to describe expressions and gestures. When give is used like this, the indirect object goes in front of the direct object. He gave her a kind smile. As he passed me, he gave me a wink. You can also use give to describe an effect produced by someone or something. Again, the indirect object goes in front of the direct object. I thought I'd give you a surprise. That noise gives me a headache. You also say that you give someone information, advice, a warning, or an order. When give is used like this, the indirect object can go either in front of the direct object or after it. Her secretary gave the caller the message. He gave a strict warning to them not to look at the sun. The captain gave an order to his team. If you put something in someone's hand expecting them to take it, and they do take it, don't say that you 'offer' it to them. You say that you give it to them. She gave Minnie the keys. He gave me a red jewellery box. dower, endow - furnish with an endowment; "When she got married, she got dowered" hand out, pass out, give out, distribute - give to several people; "The teacher handed out the exams" give away - make a gift of; "She gave away her antique furniture" raffle, raffle off - dispose of in a lottery; "We raffled off a trip to the Bahamas" bung, fee, tip - give a tip or gratuity to in return for a service, beyond the compensation agreed on; "Remember to tip the waiter"; "fee the steward" bequeath, will, leave - leave or give by will after one's death; "My aunt bequeathed me all her jewelry"; "My grandfather left me his entire estate" cede, surrender, give up, deliver - relinquish possession or control over; "The squatters had to surrender the building after the police moved in" deed over, grant - transfer by deed; "grant land" treat - provide with a gift or entertainment; "Grandmother always treated us to the circus"; "I like to treat myself to a day at a spa when I am depressed" donate - give to a charity or good cause; "I donated blood to the Red Cross for the victims of the earthquake"; "donate money to the orphanage"; "She donates to her favorite charity every month" tender - offer or present for acceptance render, submit - make over as a return; "They had to render the estate" convey - make known; pass on, of information; "She conveyed the message to me" tell - let something be known; "Tell them that you will be late" bequeath, will, leave - leave or give by will after one's death; "My aunt bequeathed me all her jewelry"; "My grandfather left me his entire estate" give - convey or reveal information; "Give one's name" dine - give dinner to; host for dinner; "I'm wining and dining my friends" scavenge - feed on carrion or refuse; "hyenas scavenge" fodder - give fodder (to domesticated animals) swill, slop - feed pigs regurgitate - feed through the beak by regurgitating previously swallowed food; "many birds feed their young by regurgitating what they have swallowed and carried to the nest" corn - feed (cattle) with corn malnourish, undernourish - provide with insufficient quality or quantity of nourishment; "The stunted growth of these children shows that they are undernourished" overfeed - feed excessively spoonfeed - feed with a spoon force-feed - feed someone who will not or cannot eat cater, ply, provide, supply - give what is desired or needed, especially support, food or sustenance; "The hostess provided lunch for all the guests" lunch - provide a midday meal for; "She lunched us well" breakfast - provide breakfast for breastfeed, give suck, lactate, wet-nurse, suckle, nurse, suck - give suck to; "The wetnurse suckled the infant"; "You cannot nurse your baby in public in some places" bottlefeed - feed (infants) with a bottle inject - feed intravenously aliment, nutrify, nourish - give nourishment to range - let eat; "range the animals in the prairie" pasture, graze, crop - let feed in a field or pasture or meadow law, jurisprudence - the collection of rules imposed by authority; "civilization presupposes respect for the law"; "the great problem for jurisprudence to allow freedom while enforcing order" give - inflict as a punishment; "She gave the boy a good spanking"; "The judge gave me 10 years" render, give - bestow; "give homage"; "render thanks" accord, allot, grant - allow to have; "grant a privilege" 1. to stop in order to allow eg traffic to pass. Give way to traffic coming from the right. plek maak vir يَفْسَحُ مجالا لِ، يُعْطي طريقا لِ отдавам път ceder a vez dát přednost freie Bahn lassen stoppe op δίνω προτεραιότητα (για κυκλοφορία) ceder el paso teed andma راه دادن väistää céder לפנות דרך रास्ता देना propustiti elsőbbséget ad (vkinek) berhenti víkja dare la precedenza ゆずる 양보하다 praleisti dot ceļu; palaist garām berhenti voorrang geven vike forustąpić لاړه ورکول ceder a mão a ceda trecerea пропускать uvoľniť cestu, dať prednosť (v jazde) dati prednost propustiti lämna företräde หลีกทาง yol vermek 讓路 давати дорогу رک کر کسی اور کو جانے دینا dừng lại nhường đường 让路 cedir el pas 2. to break, collapse etc under pressure. The bridge will give way any day now. padgee يَنْهار، يَسْقُطُ تَحْت срутвам се ceder povolit, prasknout, podlomit se nachgeben give efter σπάζω ; καταρρέω μετά από πίεσηceder kokku varisema فرو ریختن romahtaa s'effondrer לקרוס दबाव में टूट जाना, गिर जाना popustiti beszakad runtuh láta undan, bresta cedere 崩壊する 무너지다 neišlaikyti padoties; neizturēt patah het begeven briste ; gi etter (for)runąć ماتکیدل ceder a se prăbuşi обваливаться prelomiť sa, povoliť, prasknúť zrušiti se srušiti se ge vika หัก; พัง çökmek 塌陷 прогинатися زور وغیرہ سے ٹوٹنا یا گر جانا gãy; đứt 塌陷 cedir 3. to agree against one's will. I have no intention of giving way to demands like that. toegee يوافِقُ ضد رغْبَتِه съгласявам се concordar ustoupit nachgeben give efter δέχομαι παρά τη θέλησή μου ceder ante järele andma تسلیم شدن antaa periksi céder (à) לוותר इच्छा के विपरीत राजी होना pristati enged menyetujui láta undan cedere 屈する (마음이) 꺾이다 pasiduoti piekāpties setuju zwichten voor gi etterpoddać się تسلیمیدل concordar a ceda (la) уступать ustúpiť popustiti popustiti ge efter ยอมตาม boyun eğmek 讓步 поступатися خواہش کے بغیر متفق ہونا nhượng bộ 让步 cedir davant','url':'http://www.thefreedictionary.com/give','og_descr':'Definition, Synonyms, Translations of give by The Free Dictionary
CASTLE Season 8 Premiere: ‘XY’ You Ask, I Answer [caption id='attachment_39872' align='aligncenter' width='590'] Credit: ABC[/caption] CASTLE's eighth season.