Need another word that means the same as “took”? Find 30 related words for “took” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
Associations of "Took" (30 Words)
acquirement | The action of acquiring something. The acquirement of self control. |
acquisition | An ability that has been acquired by training. The acquisition of wealth. |
bring | Go or come after and bring or take back. She brings a special atmosphere to our meetings. |
broach | (of a fish or sea mammal) rise through the water and break the surface. He broached the subject he had been avoiding all evening. |
buccaneer | Live like a buccaneer. The company might be a target for an individual buccaneer seeking power and prestige. |
confiscate | Appropriate (something, especially land) to the public treasury as a penalty. The guards confiscated his camera. |
deprivation | The disadvantage that results from losing something. Losing him is no great deprivation. |
deprive | Prevent (a person or place) from having or using something. The city was deprived of its water supplies. |
dispossess | (in sport) deprive (a player) of the ball. He dispossessed Hendrie and set off on a solo run. |
fetch | The action of fetching. That brute Cullam fetched him a wallop. |
forfeit | The action of forfeiting something. Those unable to meet their taxes were liable to forfeit their estates. |
forfeiture | Something that is lost or surrendered as a penalty. Magistrates ordered the forfeiture of his computer. |
grab | Take hold of so as to seize or restrain or stop the motion of. The brakes grabbed very badly. |
have | Have or possess either in a concrete or an abstract sense. Have a postdoc. |
hold | Support or hold in a certain manner. This basic argument holds for almost any economic model of competition. |
impound | Place or shut up in a pound. Vehicles parked where they cause an obstruction will be impounded. |
impoverish | Make poor. The wars had impoverished him. |
loot | Goods or money obtained illegally. A gang looted Rs 1 5 lakh from a passenger. |
own | Have something as one s own possess. For your own use. |
picking | The act of picking crops or fruit or hops etc. He sent the first picking of berries to the market. |
pillage | The act of stealing valuable things from a place. Rebellious peasants intent on pillage. |
plunder | Plunder a town after capture. Looters moved into the disaster area to plunder shops. |
procure | Cause (something) to happen. He procured his wife to sign the mandate for the joint account. |
ransack | Go through (a place) stealing things and causing damage. Man has ransacked the planet for fuel. |
secure | Protected against attack or other criminal activity. A secure unit for young offenders. |
seize | Seize and take control without authority and possibly with force take as one s right or possession. He seized his chance to attack as Carr hesitated. |
supplant | Take the place or move into the position of. The computer has supplanted the slide rule. |
usurp | Take the place of (someone in a position of power) illegally; supplant. Gloom had usurped mirth at the party after the news of the terrorist act broke. |