take in in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Translations for take in in the English»Spanish Dictionary

I.take in VB [Am teɪk -, Brit teɪk -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

II.take in VB [Am teɪk -, Brit teɪk -] (v + o + adv) (deceive)

III.take in VB [Am teɪk -, Brit teɪk -] (v + adv + o)

Translations for take in in the English»Spanish Dictionary

I.take <pt took, pp taken> [Am teɪk, Brit teɪk] VB trans

1.1. take (to carry):

13. take (of time):

demorar(se) LatAm

14. take (to need):

16. take (to accept):

II.take <pt took, pp taken> [Am teɪk, Brit teɪk] VB intr

III.take [Am teɪk, Brit teɪk] N

See also take for, shape, offense, liking, heart

take for VB [Am teɪk -, Brit teɪk -] (v + o + prep + o)

I.shape [Am ʃeɪp, Brit ʃeɪp] N

II.shape [Am ʃeɪp, Brit ʃeɪp] VB trans

III.shape [Am ʃeɪp, Brit ʃeɪp] VB intr

offense, offence Brit [Am əˈfɛns, Brit əˈfɛns] N

liking [Am ˈlaɪkɪŋ, Brit ˈlʌɪkɪŋ] N

heart [Am hɑrt, Brit hɑːt] N

1.3. heart (inmost feelings):

2.2. heart (love, affection):

2.3. heart (enthusiasm, inclination):

3. heart (courage, morale):

IN → Indiana

I.in [Am ɪn, Brit ɪn] PREP

1.1. in (indicating place, location):

4.1. in (indicating manner):

de a dos LatAm

II.in [Am ɪn, Brit ɪn] ADV in often appears as the second element of certain verb structures in English (close in, hand in, stand in, etc). For translations, see the relevant verb entry (close, hand, stand, etc).

3. in (involved):

III.in [Am ɪn, Brit ɪn] ADJ

See also get in with

in. → inch(es)

take in in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for take in in the English»Spanish Dictionary

Translations for take in in the English»Spanish Dictionary

I.take [teɪk] took, taken took, taken N

II.take [teɪk] took, taken took, taken VB trans

III.take [teɪk] took, taken took, taken VB intr

American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Beyond outsourcing, pension fund investment teams have occasionally grown to take in other, unrelated, assets.
en.wikipedia.org
Smiley's parents agreed to take in and raise their four orphaned nieces and nephews.
en.wikipedia.org
You can also take in a paying guest and use the rental and food charges for your short-term investments avenues.
profit.ndtv.com
They frequently take in mouthfuls of juveniles and spit them out again.
en.wikipedia.org
They continued to take in orphans, but few stayed past the end of their indentures.
en.wikipedia.org
Whilst the phrase descent group suggests purely a lineage-based arrangement, in reality these groups were fluid and adapted their genealogies to take in new members.
en.wikipedia.org
They are extremely distrustful of outsiders and do not often take in strangers, especially ex-holders, without some proof of trust.
en.wikipedia.org
What would be the function of a sense organ if there were not the nervous system to take in the signal and induce behavior?
www.evolutionnews.org
The college is where they take in wanna-be eurocrats and put them through a kind of ideological kidney dialysis.
synonblog.dailymail.co.uk
The use of natural redwood shingles and the windows to take in the light and warmth.
en.wikipedia.org

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