BORROW


Meaning of BORROW in English

(~s, ~ing, ~ed)

Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.

1.

If you ~ something that belongs to someone else, you take it or use it for a period of time, usually with their permission.

Can I ~ a pen please?...

He wouldn’t let me ~ his clothes.

? lend

VERB: V n, V n

2.

If you ~ money from someone or from a bank, they give it to you and you agree to pay it back at some time in the future.

Morgan ~ed ?5,000 from his father to form the company 20 years ago...

It’s so expensive to ~ from finance companies...

He ~ed heavily to get the money together.

VERB: V n from n, V from n, V, also V n

3.

If you ~ a book from a library, you take it away for a fixed period of time.

I couldn’t afford to buy any, so I ~ed them from the library.

VERB: V n from n

4.

If you ~ something such as a word or an idea from another language or from another person’s work, you use it in your own language or work.

I ~ed his words for my book’s title...

Their engineers are happier ~ing other people’s ideas than developing their own.

VERB: V n, V n

5.

Someone who is living on ~ed time or who is on ~ed time has continued to live or to do something for longer than was expected, and is likely to die or be stopped from doing it soon.

Perhaps that illness, diagnosed as fatal, gave him a sense of living on ~ed time.

PHRASE: V inflects

Collins COBUILD.      Толковый словарь английского языка для изучающих язык Коллинз COBUILD (международная база данных языков Бирмингемского университета) .