care
[ kair ]
/ kɛər /
noun
verb (used without object), cared, car·ing.
verb (used with object), cared, car·ing.
to feel concern about: He doesn't care what others say.
to wish; desire; like: Would you care to dance?
Idioms for care
Origin of care
before 900; (noun) Middle English; Old English
caru, cearu, cognate with Gothic
kara, Old High German
chara “lament”
synonym study for care
1. See
concern.
3. To take
care,
pains,
trouble (to do something) implies watchful, conscientious effort to do something exactly right. To take
care implies the performance of one particular detail:
She took care to close the cover before striking the match. To take
pains suggests a sustained carefulness, an effort to see that nothing is overlooked but that every small detail receives attention:
to take pains with fine embroidery. To take
trouble implies an effort that requires a considerable amount of activity and exertion:
to take the trouble to make suitable arrangements.
usage note for care
13.
Couldn't care less, a phrase used to express indifference, is sometimes heard as
could care less, which ought to mean the opposite but is intended to be synonymous with the former phrase. Both versions are common mainly in informal speech.
OTHER WORDS FROM care
car·er, noun non·car·ing, adjective o·ver·care, noun un·car·ing, adjectiveWords nearby care
British Dictionary definitions for take care (1 of 2)
care
/ (kɛə) /
verb
noun
Word Origin for care
Old English
cearu (n),
cearian (vb), of Germanic origin; compare Old High German
chara lament, Latin
garrīre to gossip
British Dictionary definitions for take care (2 of 2)
CARE
/ (kɛə) /
n acronym for
Cooperative for American Relief Everywhere, Inc.; a federation of US charities, giving financial and technical assistance to many regions of the world
communicated authenticity, regard, empathy: the three qualities believed to be essential in the therapist practising client-centred therapy
Idioms and Phrases with take care (1 of 2)
take care
Be careful, use caution, as in Take care or you will slip on the ice. [Late 1500s]
Good-bye, as in I have to go now; take care. This apparent abbreviation of take care of yourself is used both orally and in writing, where it sometimes replaces the conventional Sincerely or Love in signing off correspondence. [Colloquial; 1960s]
Idioms and Phrases with take care (2 of 2)
care