take+something+from
21take something home — phrase to earn a particular amount of money from your job She takes home about £100 a week. Thesaurus: to earn a particular amount of moneysynonym Main entry: home …
22take courage (from something) — take courage (from sth) idiom to begin to feel happier and more confident because of sth Main entry: ↑courageidiom …
23take courage from something — to feel more confident and hopeful because of something We can take courage from his success …
24take something off the boil — British to remove something from heat so that it stops boiling Take the pan off the boil and add the remaining ingredients …
25take something to extremes — go, etc. to exˈtremes | take sth to exˈtremes idiom to act or be forced to act in a way that is far from normal or reasonable • It s embarrassing the extremes he ll go to in order to impress his boss. • Taken to extremes, this kind of behaviour… …
26take something off — 1) remove clothing from one s or another s body she took off her cardigan 2) deduct part of an amount 3) choose to have a period away from work I took the next day off …
27take something home — to earn a particular amount of money from your job She takes home about £100 a week …
28give or take something — give or take (something) approximately the amount mentioned. The length of my house from front to back is 100 feet, give or take. The army spent two billion dollars, give or take a few million, to develop the new fighter plane …
29detract something from something — deˈtract from sth | deˈtract sth from sth derived (not used in the progressive tenses) to make sth seem less good or enjoyable Syn: take away from • He was determined not to let anything detract from his enjoyment of the trip. Main entry …
30take — take1 [ teık ] (past tense took [ tuk ] ; past participle tak|en [ teıkən ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 move something/someone ▸ 2 cause someone/something to move ▸ 3 perform action ▸ 4 need something ▸ 5 accept ▸ 6 win prize/election ▸ 7 reach out and get ▸… …