Take on Meaning in English
expression
ˈteɪk/ /ˈɑn/, /ˈɔn
TAYK-ahn or TAYK-awn
tˈeɪk/ /ˈɒn
TAYK-on
Definition
To accept a job, responsibility, task, or challenge. It can also mean to face someone in a competition or conflict.
Usage & Nuances
'Take on' is common in both formal and informal speech. Collocates with 'new responsibility', 'challenge', 'task', and 'opponent'. Be careful not to confuse with 'take in' or 'take over', which have different meanings.
Spanish: asumir - enfrentarse a - aceptar (responsabilidad/trabajo)Portuguese (BR): assumir - enfrentar - aceitar (responsabilidade/trabalho)Portuguese (PT): assumir - enfrentar - aceitar (responsabilidade/trabalho)Chinese (Simplified): 承担 - 接受 (任务/责任) - 挑战Chinese (Traditional): 承擔 - 接受 (任務/責任) - 挑戰Hindi: स्वीकार करना (जिम्मेदारी/कार्य) - मुकाबला करनाArabic: يتولى - يواجه - يقبل (مسؤولية/مهمة)Bengali: গ্রহণ করা - মোকাবিলা করাRussian: взяться (за что-то) - принять (на себя) - вступить в борьбу (с кем-то)Japanese: 引き受ける - 受け持つ - 立ち向かうVietnamese: đảm nhận - nhận (nhiệm vụ) - đối đầuKorean: 맡다 - 받아들이다 - 맞서다Turkish: üstlenmek - kabul etmek - karşılaşmakUrdu: ذمہ داری لینا - مقابلہ کرناIndonesian: mengambil (tugas/tanggung jawab) - menghadapi (lawan/tantangan)
Example Sentences
She will take on a new project at work.
basic
Are you ready to take on this challenge?
basic
We cannot take on more work right now.
basic
He was eager to take on extra responsibilities to prove himself.
natural
The small team decided to take on a much larger competitor.
natural
You shouldn't take on more than you can handle.
natural