Idioms for run

Origin of run

before 900; (v.) Middle English rinnen, rennen, partly < Old Norse rinna, renna, partly continuing Old English rinnan; cognate with German rinnen; form run orig. past participle, later extended to present tense; (noun and adj.) derivative of the v.

OTHER WORDS FROM run

British Dictionary definitions for run into (1 of 2)

run into

verb (preposition; mainly intr)

(also tr) to collide with or cause to collide with her car ran into a tree
to encounter unexpectedly
(also tr) to be beset by or cause to be beset by the project ran into financial difficulties
to extend to; be of the order of debts running into thousands

British Dictionary definitions for run into (2 of 2)

run
/ (rʌn) /

verb runs, running, ran or run

noun

Word Origin for run

Old English runnen, past participle of ( ge) rinnan; related to Old Frisian, Old Norse rinna, Old Saxon, Gothic, Old High German rinnan

Idioms and Phrases with run into (1 of 2)

run into

1

Meet or find by chance, as in I ran into an old friend at the concert. [c. 1900]

2

See run against, def. 1.

3

Collide with, as in The car ran straight into the retaining wall. [c. 1800]

4

Incur, as in We've run into extra expenses with the renovation, or James said they've run into debt. [c. 1400]

5

Mount up, increase to, as in Her book may well run into a second volume.

6

Follow without interruption, as in What with one day running into the next, we never knew just what day it was! or He spoke so fast his words ran into one another. [Late 1600s] Also see run into a stone wall; run into the ground.

Idioms and Phrases with run into (2 of 2)

run