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take care of
Attend to, assume responsibility for, as in Go ahead to the movies, I'll take care of parking the car , or They've hired someone to take care of the children for a week . [Late 1500s]
Beat up or kill someone, as in If he didn't pay up they threatened to take care of him and his family . [ Slang ; c. 1930]
Example Sentences
There’s no doubt the Dodgers will take care of him before the final year of his contract, but it would be nice if it happened soon enough to have an impact with potential incoming free agents.
They often take care of everything but the farm, managing housework, yardwork and child care.
When Roosevelt signed the act into law in 1935, he did so not only to help o30 million recipients at the time, but to “take care of human needs and at the same time provide the United States an economic structure of vastly greater soundness,” Moore said.
It was a pervasive shift in left-leaning America’s orientation toward politics—“protest is the new brunch”—and a mass awakening of people who’d suddenly come to the realization that they couldn’t just sit by and allow the arc of the moral universe to take care of itself.
Lue wanted his team to take care of the basketball, which they did by turning the ball over just nine times.
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