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borrow
1[ bor-oh, bawr-oh ]
verb (used with object)
- to take or obtain with the promise to return the same or an equivalent:
Our neighbor borrowed my lawn mower.
- to use, appropriate, or introduce from another source or from a foreign source:
to borrow an idea from the opposition;
to borrow a word from French.
Synonyms: , , , , ,
- Arithmetic. (in subtraction) to take from one denomination and add to the next lower.
verb (used without object)
- to borrow something:
Don't borrow unless you intend to repay.
- Nautical.
- to sail close to the wind; luff.
- to sail close to the shore.
- Golf. to putt on other than a direct line from the lie of the ball to the hole, to compensate for the incline or roll of the green.
Borrow
2[ bor-oh, bawr-oh ]
noun
- George, 1803–81, English traveler, writer, and student of languages, especially Romani.
borrow
1/ ˈɒəʊ /
verb
- to obtain or receive (something, such as money) on loan for temporary use, intending to give it, or something equivalent or identical, back to the lender
- to adopt (ideas, words, etc) from another source; appropriate
- not_standard.to lend
- golf to putt the ball uphill of the direct path to the hole
- intr golf (of a ball) to deviate from a straight path because of the slope of the ground
noun
- golf a deviation of a ball from a straight path because of the slope of the ground
a left borrow
- material dug from a borrow pit to provide fill at another
- living on borrowed time
- living an unexpected extension of life
- close to death
Borrow
2/ ˈɒəʊ /
noun
- BorrowGeorge (Henry)18031881MEnglishTRAVEL AND EXPLORATION: travellerWRITING: writer George ( Henry ). 1803–81, English traveller and writer. His best-known works are the semiautobiographical novels of Gypsy life and language, Lavengro (1851) and its sequel The Romany Rye (1857)
Usage
Derived Forms
- ˈǰǷɱ, noun
Other yvlog Forms
- ǰ۴Ƿ·· adjective
- ǰ۴Ƿ· noun
- ԴDz·ǰ۴Ƿɱ adjective
- non·ǰ۴Ƿ· noun
- v·ǰ۴Ƿ verb
- ܲ·ǰ۴Ƿɱ adjective
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of borrow1
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of borrow1
Idioms and Phrases
- borrow trouble, to do something that is unnecessary and may cause future harm or inconvenience.
More idioms and phrases containing borrow
In addition to the idiom beginning with borrow , also see beg, borrow, or steal ; on borrowed time .Example Sentences
This would wipe out the headroom the chancellor has to meet her spending and borrowing rules, and could mean further tax rises or spending cuts.
By the late ’90s, Cordova had brought in a stage, borrowed sound equipment from original Fishbone bassist John Norwood Fisher and started working with local music promoters to host shows.
Conversely, an increase would make borrowing more expensive, but bring better returns for savers.
On Wednesday US President Donald Trump announced new global tariffs, which could hit the UK's economic growth and wipe out the headroom the chancellor has to meet her spending and borrowing rules.
It also borrowed from the Chinese school of action movies, advancing and improving the American school of action work.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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