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more about got
got |
2 definitions found From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]: Get \Get\ (g[e^]t), v. t. [imp. {Got} (g[o^]t) (Obs. {Gat} (g[a^]t)); p. p. {Got} (Obsolescent {Gotten} (g[o^]t"t'n)); p. pr & vb n. {Getting}.] [OE. geten, AS gitan, gietan (in comp.); akin to Icel. geta, Goth. bigitan to find L. prehendere to seize, take Gr chanda`nein to hold contain. Cf {Comprehend}, {Enterprise}, {Forget}, {Impregnable}, {Prehensile}.] 1. To procure; to obtain; to gain possession of to acquire; to earn; to obtain as a price or reward; to come by to win, by almost any means as to get favor by kindness; to get wealth by industry and economy; to get land by purchase, etc 2. Hence with have and had to come into or be in possession of to have --Johnson. Thou hast got the face of man. --Herbert. 3. To beget; to procreate; to generate. I had rather to adopt a child than get it --Shak. 4. To obtain mental possession of to learn; to commit to memory; to memorize; as to get a lesson; also with out as to get out one's Greek lesson. It being harder with him to get one sermon by heart, than to pen twenty. --Bp. Fell. 5. To prevail on to induce; to persuade. Get him to say his prayers. --Shak. 6. To procure to be or to cause to be in any state or condition; -- with a following participle. Those things I bid you do get them dispatched. --Shak. 7. To betake; to remove; -- in a reflexive use Get thee out from this land. --Gen. xxxi. 13. He . . . got himself . . . to the strong town of Mega. --Knolles. Note: Get as a transitive verb is combined with adverbs implying motion, to express the causing to or the effecting in the object of the verb of the kind of motion indicated by the preposition; thus to get in to cause to enter to bring under shelter; as to get in the hay; to get out to make come forth, to extract; to get off to take off to remove; to get together, to cause to come together, to collect. {To get by heart}, to commit to memory. {To get the better of}, {To get the best of}, to obtain an advantage over to surpass; to subdue. {To get up}, to cause to be established or to exit to prepare; to arrange; to construct; to invent; as to get up a celebration, a machine, a book, an agitation. Syn: To obtain; gain; win; acquire. See {Obtain}. From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]: Got \Got\, imp. & p. p. of {Get}. See {Get}.
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