Dispossess vs Takeaway - What's the difference?
dispossess | takeaway |
To deprive someone of the possession of land, especially by evicting them.
(sports) To take possession of the ball/puck etc. (from someone).
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=October 1
, author=John Sinnott
, title=Aston Villa 2 - 0 Wigan
, work=BBC Sport
(chiefly, UK, Australia, and, New Zealand, of food) To be eaten off the premises.
(chiefly, UK, Australia, and, New Zealand) A restaurant that sells food to be eaten elsewhere.
* 2005 , Amsterdam , ,
* 2006 , Mary Fitzpatrick, Tom Parkinson, Nick Ray, East Africa , Lonely Planet,
(chiefly, UK, Australia, and, New Zealand) A meal bought to be eaten elsewhere.
* 2008 , Annalisa Rellie, Tricia Hayne, Turks & Caicos Islands , Bradt Travel Guides,
* 2008 , The Complete Residents? Guide: Los Angeles , Explorer Publishing,
(golf) The preliminary part of a golfer?s swing when the club is brought back away from the ball.
* 2001 , David Chmiel, Kevin Morris, Golf Past 50 ,
* 2005 , Paul G. Schempp, Peter Mattsson, Golf: Steps To Success ,
* 2007 , John Andrisani, Golfweek?s 101 Winning Golf Tips ,
(US) A concession made by a labor union in the course of negotiations.
An idea from a talk, presentation, etc., that the listener or reader should remember and consider.
* 2008 , Carol A. E. Bentley, Beat The Recession: Proven Marketing Tactics , Volume 1,
* 2010 , Scott Monty, Foreword'', Erik Qualman, ''Socialnomics: How Social Media Transforms the Way We Live and Do Business ,
As a verb dispossess
is to deprive someone of the possession of land, especially by evicting them.As an adjective takeaway is
(chiefly|uk|australia|and|new zealand|of food) to be eaten off the premises.As a noun takeaway is
(chiefly|uk|australia|and|new zealand) a restaurant that sells food to be eaten elsewhere.dispossess
English
Verb
citation, page= , passage=It was Bannan who released Agbonlahor for his goal with a long-range curling pass after Stephen Warnock had dispossessed Mohamed Diame.}}
takeaway
English
(wikipedia takeaway)Alternative forms
* take-awayAdjective
(-)Usage notes
Frequently used in the question “eat-in or takeaway ?” (North American: “for here or to go?”) at restaurants that offer food for both on and off premise eating.Synonyms
* (to be eaten off premises) to go (North America)Antonyms
* eat in (British) * for here (North America) * have here (New Zealand)Descendants
* Italian: (l)Noun
(en noun)- If you're hungry, there's a takeaway just around the corner.
page 129,
- The wonderful, and deeply filling, world of Dutch broodjes (sandwiches) has its greatest champion in this takeaway , one of the very few that still features proper homemade meat and fish salads in your bun, rather than the almost ubiquitous factory prepared product that?s taken over the sandwich market.
page 479,
- Some of the cheapest places to eat in Kampala are the ubiquitous takeaways that dot the city centre.
- I fancy an Indian takeaway tonight.
page 99,
- Good Italian cuisine & friendly service. Also does takeaways , including pizza.
page 315,
- Pizza and Thai food are popular delivery and takeaway choices, but there are a number of options.
page 40,
- One drill to help you work on the long, low takeaway is to place a tee, a coin, or even another ball just beyond your back foot (whatever you choose should be slightly inside your toe to promote a slightly inside swing path).
page 55,
- Make sure your hands and shoulders work together during the takeaway .
unnumbered page,
- Tiger Woods, like other golfing greats, employs a smooth, evenly paced takeaway action.
page 363,
- For example, one of the big takeaways for myself (even though I know better) is when I don?t review my goals daily I get sucked into what?s currently happening and easily get distracted from what?s most important.
page xvi,
- A strength of this book is Qualman?s ability to take complex issues and break them into easily digestible takeaways through the use of real world examples and analogies.