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View synonyms for pick up

pick-up

noun

  1. Also called: pick-up arm tone armthe light balanced arm of a record player that carries the wires from the cartridge to the preamplifier

  2. an electromagnetic transducer that converts the vibrations of the steel strings of an electric guitar or other amplified instrument into electric signals

  3. another name for cartridge

  4. Also called: pick-up trucka small truck with an open body and low sides, used for light deliveries

  5. informal,  an ability to accelerate rapidly

    this car has good pick-up

  6. informal,  a casual acquaintance, usually one made with sexual intentions

  7. informal

    1. a stop to collect passengers, goods, etc

    2. the people or things collected

  8. slang,  a free ride in a motor vehicle

  9. informal,  an improvement

  10. slang,  a pick-me-up

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


adjective

  1. organized, arranged, or assembled hastily and without planning

    a pick-up band

    pick-up games

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

verb

  1. (tr) to gather up in the hand or hands

  2. (tr) to acquire, obtain, or purchase casually, incidentally, etc

  3. (tr) to catch (a disease)

    she picked up a bad cold during the weekend

  4. (intr) to improve in health, condition, activity, etc

    the market began to pick up

  5. (reflexive) to raise (oneself) after a fall or setback

  6. (tr) to notice or sense

    she picked up a change in his attitude

  7. to resume where one left off; return to

    we'll pick up after lunch

    they picked up the discussion

  8. (tr) to learn gradually or as one goes along

  9. (tr) to take responsibility for paying (a bill)

    he picked up the bill for dinner

  10. informal,  (tr) to reprimand

    he picked her up on her table manners

  11. (tr) to collect or give a lift to (passengers, hitchhikers, goods, etc)

  12. informal,  (tr) to become acquainted with, esp with a view to having sexual relations

  13. informal,  (tr) to arrest

  14. to increase (speed)

    the cars picked up down the straight

  15. (tr) to receive (electrical signals, a radio signal, sounds, etc), as for transmission or amplification

  16. to restore a situation to normality after a crisis or collapse

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Idioms and Phrases

Lift, take up by hand, as in Please pick up that book from the floor . [Early 1300s]

Collect or gather, as in First they had to pick up the pieces of broken glass .

Tidy, put in order, as in Let's pick up the bedroom , or I'm always picking up after Pat . [Mid-1800s]

Take on passengers or freight, as in The bus picks up commuters at three stops .

Acquire casually, get without great effort or by accident. For example, I picked up a nice coat at the sale , or She had no trouble picking up French . This usage is even extended to contracting diseases, as in I think I picked up the baby's cold . [Early 1500s]

Claim, as in He picked up his laundry every Friday .

Buy, as in Please pick up some wine at the store on your way home .

. Accept a charge in order to pay it, as in They always wait for us to pick up the tab . [ Colloquial ; mid-1900s]

Increase speed or rate, as in The plane picked up speed , or The conductor told the strings to pick up the tempo .

Gain, as in They picked up five yards on that pass play .

Take into custody, apprehend, as in The police picked him up for burglary . [ Colloquial ; second half of 1800s]

Make a casual acquaintance with, especially in anticipation of sexual relations, as in A stranger tried to pick her up at the bus station . [ Slang ; late 1800s]

Come upon, find, detect, as in The dog picked up the scent , or They picked up two submarines on sonar , or I can't pick up that station on the car radio .

Resume, as in Let's pick up the conversation after lunch .

Improve or cause to improve in condition or activity, as in Sales picked up last fall , or He picked up quickly after he got home from the hospital , or A cup of coffee will pick you up . [1700s]

Gather one's belongings, as in She just picked up and left him .

pick oneself up . Recover from a fall or other mishap, as in Jim picked himself up and stood there waiting . [Mid-1800s] Also see the subsequent entries beginning with pick up .

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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

There is a dedicated pick-up and drop-off area at the festival's Blue Gate, and it can be located with What3Words: layers, patrol, bills.

From BBC

For starters, any rideshare option may seem easy enough on the way there, but quickly turns into a game of “Where’s Waldo?” when pick-up comes around.

This event includes a mandated Old Town Pasadena pick-up and drop-off for rideshare.

Think about waiting around the mandated Old Town pick-up area with even a fraction of those attendees — after this sold-out show — before you call in that Uber or Lyft.

Amira and her husband finally managed to hitch a ride on a pick-up truck carrying a cargo of vegetables.

From BBC

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pickuppickup arm