Need another word that means the same as “taken”? Find 1 synonym and 30 related words for “taken” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Taken” are: interpreted
Taken as an Adjective
Definitions of "Taken" as an adjective
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “taken” as an adjective can have the following definitions:
- Understood in a certain way; made sense of.
- Be affected with an indisposition.
Synonyms of "Taken" as an adjective (1 Word)
interpreted | Understood in a certain way; made sense of. An open door interpreted as an invitation. |
Usage Examples of "Taken" as an adjective
- A smile taken as consent.
- A word taken literally.
- Couldn't tell when he would be taken drunk.
- The child was taken ill.
Associations of "Taken" (30 Words)
acquirement | Something acquired, typically a skill. The acquirement of self control. |
acquisition | An ability that has been acquired by training. The child s acquisition of language. |
bring | Go or come after and bring or take back. She brings a special atmosphere to our meetings. |
broach | A decorative pin worn by women. The salmon broach then fall to slap the water. |
buccaneer | Live like a buccaneer. The marauding buccaneers who used to terrorize the Mediterranean coasts. |
confiscate | Take temporary possession of as a security, by legal authority. The police confiscated the stolen artwork. |
deprivation | Act of depriving someone of food or money or rights. Losing him is no great deprivation. |
deprive | Depose (someone, especially a member of the clergy) from office. The city was deprived of its water supplies. |
dispossess | Deprive of the possession of real estate. A champion of the poor and the dispossessed. |
fetch | The action of fetching. The devil will fetch you. |
forfeit | The action of forfeiting something. His possessions were declared forfeit. |
forfeiture | Something that is lost or surrendered as a penalty. Magistrates ordered the forfeiture of his computer. |
grab | Capture the attention or imagination of. She grabbed him by the shirt collar. |
have | Have or possess either in a concrete or an abstract sense. Do you have a client named Peters. |
hold | Hold the attention of. They hold that all literature is empty of meaning. |
impound | Seize and take legal custody of (something, especially a vehicle, goods, or documents) because of an infringement of a law. The customs agents impounded the illegal shipment. |
impoverish | Make (a person or area) poor. The wars had impoverished him. |
loot | Steal (goods) in a war, riot, etc. Police confronted the protestors who were looting shops. |
own | Have something as one s own possess. The style had its own charm. |
picking | The act of picking crops or fruit or hops etc. He sent the first picking of berries to the market. |
pillage | Rob a (place) using violence, especially in wartime. The abbey was plundered and pillaged. |
plunder | Plunder a town after capture. The contents of the abandoned houses were plundered by members of the new regime. |
procure | Obtain (someone) as a prostitute for another person. Food procured for the rebels. |
ransack | Go through (a place) stealing things and causing damage. Burglars ransacked her home. |
secure | Financially safe. Everyone needs to have a home and to feel secure and wanted. |
seize | Seize and take control without authority and possibly with force take as one s right or possession. The invaders seized the land and property of the inhabitants. |
supplant | Supersede and replace. The computer has supplanted the slide rule. |
usurp | Take the place of. The Hanoverian dynasty had usurped the Stuarts. |