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Take over   /teɪk ˈoʊvər/   Listen
Take over

verb
1.
Seize and take control without authority and possibly with force; take as one's right or possession.  Synonyms: arrogate, assume, seize, usurp.  "He usurped my rights" , "She seized control of the throne after her husband died"
2.
Take on titles, offices, duties, responsibilities.  Synonyms: adopt, assume, take on.
3.
Free someone temporarily from his or her obligations.  Synonym: relieve.
4.
Take on as one's own the expenses or debts of another person.  Synonyms: accept, assume, bear.  "She agreed to bear the responsibility"
5.
Take over ownership of; of corporations and companies.  Synonyms: buy out, buy up.
6.
Do over.  Synonym: repeat.
7.
Take up and practice as one's own.  Synonyms: adopt, borrow, take up.
8.
Take up, as of debts or payments.  Synonym: absorb.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Take over" Quotes from Famous Books



... tell a story so charmingly as Mr. Darwin, but I can no more believe that all this has come about without design on the part of the orchid, and a gradual perception of the advantages it is able to take over the bee, and a righteous determination to enjoy them, than I can believe that a mousetrap or a steam-engine is the result of the accumulation of blind minute fortuitous variations in a creature called man, which creature has ...
— Life and Habit • Samuel Butler

... hated the word "widower"; it had suggested Henry Carson and the Panama undertaker and funerals and tired men trying to wash children and looking for a new wife to take over that work; all the smell and grease of disordered side-street kitchens. To her, now, Julius Edward Schwirtz was not a flabby-necked widower, but a man who mourned, who felt as despairingly as could Walter Babson the loss of the baby who had crowed over the bunny-book. She, the motherless, almost ...
— The Job - An American Novel • Sinclair Lewis

... Mr. Shafto, who will take over Mr. Shaw's share of the landing business; you had better show him round and give him instructions. By the way," turning to Shafto, "I suppose you don't know a ...
— The Road to Mandalay - A Tale of Burma • B. M. Croker

... unpropitious affair to the true believer. Then, too, I have little doubt but that they are capable of making good use of their steel bodkins. Why my dervish wished to give up his easy-going profession and take over the charge of my horses I never fully determined, but it must have been because he really loved horses and found that as a dervish pure and simple he had very little to do with them. When he arrived he was dressed ...
— War in the Garden of Eden • Kermit Roosevelt

... quarter. Very reluctantly did we decide that the construction of the new steel works must cease for a time. Several prominent persons, who had invested in them, became unable to meet their payments and I was compelled to take over their interests, repaying the full cost to all. In that way control of the company ...
— Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie • Andrew Carnegie


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