TIGHTEN UP


Meaning of TIGHTEN UP in English

I. tight ‧ en /ˈtaɪtn/ BrE AmE ( also tighten up ) verb

[ Word Family: adverb : ↑ tight , ↑ tightly ; verb : ↑ tighten ; noun : ↑ tightness ; adjective : ↑ tight ]

1 . [transitive] to close or fasten something firmly by turning it OPP loosen :

Tighten the screws firmly.

I’d put the new tyre on, but I hadn’t tightened up the wheel.

2 . [intransitive and transitive] if you tighten a rope, wire etc, or if it tightens, it is stretched or pulled so that it becomes tight:

When you tighten guitar strings, the note gets higher.

The rope tightened around his body.

3 . [intransitive and transitive] to become stiff or make a part of your body become stiff OPP relax :

His mouth tightened into a thin, angry line.

Tighten up the muscles of both arms.

4 . tighten your grip/hold on something

a) to control a place or situation more strictly:

Rebel forces have tightened their hold on the capital.

b) to hold someone or something more firmly:

Sarah tightened her grip on my arm.

5 . [transitive] to make a rule, law, or system more strict OPP relax :

Efforts to tighten the rules have failed.

tighten up on something

a range of measures to tighten up on illegal share dealing

6 . tighten your belt informal to try to spend less money than you used to:

Businesses were tightening their belts and cutting jobs.

7 . tighten the screws (on somebody) informal to try to force someone to do something, by threatening them or making things difficult for them – used in news reports:

Closing the border would tighten the screws on the terrorists.

8 . [intransitive] American English if a race or competition tightens, the distance between the competitors becomes smaller:

He expects the presidential race to tighten.

tighten up phrasal verb

if a team or group tightens up, they start working together more effectively

tighten something ↔ up

We have tightened up the defence and are winning matches as a result.

II. tighten up phrasal verb ( see also ↑ tighten )

if a team or group tightens up, they start working together more effectively

tighten something ↔ up

We have tightened up the defence and are winning matches as a result.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.