take on 的定义
- to employ or hireto take on new workmen
- to assume or acquirehis voice took on a plaintive note
- to agree to do; undertakeI'll take on that job for you
- to compete against, oppose, or fightI will take him on at tennis; I'll take him on any time
- informal to exhibit great emotion, esp grief
take on 近义词
compete
challenge, oppose
assume, accept
更多take on例句
- Yet this, in the end, is a book from which one emerges sad, gloomy, disenchanted, at least if we agree to take it seriously.
- Just the hard-on before you shoot unarmed members of the public.
- And now, similarly, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee: "Bend over and take it like a prisoner!"
- ROME — What does it take for a Hollywood A-lister to get a private audience with Pope Francis?
- Although Huckabee's condescending tone - like that of an elementary school history teacher - makes it difficult to take seriously.
- I take the Extream Bells, and set down the six Changes on them thus.
- Wycliffe translates the Vulgate: “And it as a modir onourid schal meete hym, and as a womman fro virgynyte schal take him.”
- But it was necessary to take Silan, which the rebels hastened to strengthen, closely followed up by the Spaniards.
- And this summer it seemed to her that she never would be able to take proper care of her nestful of children.
- Where the dampness is excessive the fronds take on an unhealthy appearance, and mould may appear.