take to

See also: taketo and Taketo

English

Verb

take to

  1. (idiomatic) To adapt to; to learn, grasp or master.
    Although he had never skated before, he took to it quickly, and soon glided around the ice with ease.
    She took to swimming like a fish.
  2. (idiomatic) To enter; to go into or move towards.
    As the train rushed through, thousands of birds took to the air at once.
  3. (idiomatic) To begin, as a new habit or practice.
    After the third one was rejected, she took to asking the department to check the form before she submitted it.
  4. (idiomatic, of persons) To be attracted to.
    • 2002 Dec. 22, Kerry Hardie, "First Chapter: A Winter Marriage," New York Times (retrieved 9 June 2015):
      She met Ned when he was looking anyway. . . . And he took to her, he liked her crooked straightness from the start.

Derived terms

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