Idioms for use
Origin of use
1175–1225; (v.) Middle English
usen < Old French
user < Latin
ūsus, past participle of
ūtī to use; (noun) Middle English < Old French < Latin
ūsus act of using a thing, application, employment, equivalent to
ūt-, stem of
ūtī to use +
-tus suffix of v. action, with
tt >
s
SYNONYMS FOR use
1
Use,
utilize mean to make something serve one's purpose.
Use is the general word:
to use a telephone; to use a saw and other tools; to use one's eyes; to use eggs in cooking. (What is
used often has depreciated or been diminished, sometimes completely consumed:
a used automobile; All the butter has been used. ) As applied to persons,
use implies some selfish or sinister purpose:
to use another to advance oneself.
Utilize implies practical or profitable use:
to utilize the means at hand, a modern system of lighting.
3 exhaust, waste.
7 familiarize, inure.
12 employment, utilization, application, exercise.
13 handling.
usage note for use
See
usage.
OTHER WORDS FROM use
Words nearby use
British Dictionary definitions for make use of
use
verb (juːz) (tr)
noun (juːs)
Word Origin for use
C13: from Old French
user to use, from Latin
ūsus having used, from
ūtī to use
Idioms and Phrases with make use of (1 of 2)
make use of
Utilize, use, as in I hope readers will make use of this dictionary. This expression dates from the late 1500s. Shakespeare had it in The Two Gentlemen of Verona (2:4).
Idioms and Phrases with make use of (2 of 2)
use