wziąć
Meaning
- to take (to grab with the hands)
- to take (grabbing with one's hands, to place somewhere)
- to take in (to agree to take care of)
- to take (to allow to join)
- to take (to ensure that one has something with them when they depart)
- to take, to charge (to ask for or demand a certain amount of money for something)
- to take (to have temporarily, e.g. a room at a hotel)
- to take (to hire a particular person for a job or task)
- to take; to get (to gain from a particular source, e.g. a resource)
- to take, to take away (to deprive of)
- to take (to force someone to go somewhere, e.g. to the police)
- to take (to ingest e.g. medicine)
- to take (to conquer, to gain e.g. a city)
- (vulgar) to take (to have sexual relations with a woman)
- (colloquial) to take (to pass on the road while driving)
- to take (to consider someone or something to be something, especially unfairly)
- to get someone to do something (to convince someone to taking a particular action)
- to take; to get (as a light verb, to be the performer or subject of an action)
- to take (to appear in someone's body or psyche)
- to bite; to take (to attach to a hook on a rod; to be caught)
- to take on (to accept a position or function)
- to take (to defeat someone or something)
- to put on (to begin wearing some article of clothing)
- (colloquial) to take (to interest, to grab someone's attention)
- to build up
- to get (to understand somehow)
- to take (to get hit)
- to take after, to get from (to inherit some traits)
- to take, to choose, to select
- to take oneself (to grab oneself by something)
- to take each other (to grab each other by something)
- to get to (to begin to do some activity)
- to be convinced (to allow oneself to be convinced to doing something)
- (colloquial) to take on (to begin to deal intensively with matters related to a specific person)
- (colloquial) to come from (to have a source from)
- (obsolete) to be deceived
- (obsolete) to get to (to arrive, to go to)
- to appear, to show up
Frequency
Pronounced as (IPA)
/vʑɔɲt͡ɕ/
Etymology
Inherited from Old Polish wziąć. By surface analysis, wz- + jąć.
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