take care of - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
take care of (third-person singular simple present takes care of, present participle taking care of, simple past took care of, past participle taken care of)
- (transitive) To look after, to care for.
My elderly mother needs to be taken care of. - (transitive) To deal with, handle.
Can somebody take care of the customers while I clean this mess?- 2023 February 4, Katie Rogers, quoting Joe Biden, “Look! Up in the Sky! It’s a … Chinese Spy Balloon?”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
People had time to think up some questions, including reporters who shouted “Are you going to shoot down the balloon?” at President Biden shortly before the dirigible came down. “We’re going to take care of it,” the president told reporters in Syracuse, N.Y., where he was visiting family.
- 2023 February 4, Katie Rogers, quoting Joe Biden, “Look! Up in the Sky! It’s a … Chinese Spy Balloon?”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
- (transitive, slang, euphemistic) To kill.
In the motion picture ‘The Godfather’, gangster Virgil Sollozzo took care of Luca Brasi by having him strangled.
- (look after): care for, nurse
- (handle): attend to
- (kill (slang)): bump off, knock off, wax
- take care of business
- take care of the pennies and the pounds will take care of themselves
- take care of yourself
look after
- Armenian: խնամել (hy) (xnamel)
- Catalan: tenir cura de, cuidar (ca)
- Chinese:
Cantonese: 照顧 / 照顾 (ziu3 gu3)
Mandarin: 照顧 / 照顾 (zh) (zhàogù) - Comorian:
Ngazidja Comorian: hwangalia - Dutch: zorgen voor
- Esperanto: varti, flegi (eo) (nurse)
- Finnish: huolehtia (fi)
- French: soigner (fr), prendre soin de (fr), s'occuper de (fr)
- Galician: coidar (gl)
- German: sich kümmern um, pflegen (de)
- Greek: φροντίζω (el) (frontízo), νοιάζομαι (el) (noiázomai)
Ancient Greek: κομίζω (komízō) - Hebrew: טִפֵּל (tipél)
- Hindi: देखभाल करना (hi) (dekhbhāl karnā)
- Hungarian: gondoskodik (hu), ellát (hu), ápol (hu), gondját viseli
- Irish: tabhair aire do
- Italian: badare (it), prendersi cura, stare dietro (it)
- Ladino: kudiar
- Latin: cūrō (la)
- Persian: پرستاری کردن
- Polish: dbać (pl) impf, zadbać (pl) pf, zajmować się impf, zająć się pf, opiekować się impf, zaopiekować się pf
- Portuguese: cuidar (pt)
- Romanian: (eg. ai grijă de tine) (please verify) a avea grijă de
- Russian: забо́титься (ru) impf (zabótitʹsja), позабо́титься (ru) pf (pozabótitʹsja), присма́тривать (ru) impf (prismátrivatʹ), присмотре́ть (ru) pf (prismotrétʹ)
- Serbo-Croatian: brinuti se o, starati se (sh)
- Spanish: cuidar (es)
- Swahili: kutunza
- Swedish: ta hand om (sv)
- Tocharian B: yärp-
- Turkish: bakmak (tr)
- Uyghur: ئاسرىماق (asrimaq)
- Vietnamese: chăm sóc (vi), săn sóc (vi) (to take care of someone carefully)
kill
- Chinese:
Cantonese: 搞掂 (gaau2 dim6)
Mandarin: 幹掉 / 干掉 (zh) (gàndiào) - Finnish: hoidella (fi)
- German: erledigen (de)
- Hungarian: eltesz láb alól
- Latin: occido (la), macto, caedo (la), neco (la)
- Polish: załatwiać (pl) impf, załatwić (pl) pf
- Portuguese: cuidar de
- Russian: разбира́ться (ru) impf (razbirátʹsja), разобра́ться (ru) impf (razobrátʹsja)
- Spanish: encargarse de
- Turkish: icabına bakmak (tr)
- Vietnamese: xử (vi) (informal, transitive)