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Engage ɪnˈɡeɪdʒ Engaged Machine Verb Movie Mind Eye

Word3 engage
WordType (verb)
Phonetic /ɪnˈɡeɪdʒ/ /ɪnˈɡeɪdʒ/
Example
  • it is a movie that engages both the mind and the eye.
  • their pleas failed to engage any sympathy.
  • to engage the public/audience/viewer/reader
  • it was difficult to engage the students at first.
Sound Online sound. https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/media/english/us_pron/e/eng/engag/engage__us_1.mp3
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Content

engage

(verb)/ɪnˈɡeɪdʒ/ /ɪnˈɡeɪdʒ/

    Verb Forms

  1. to succeed in attracting and keeping somebody’s attention and interest
    • It is a movie that engages both the mind and the eye.
    • Their pleas failed to engage any sympathy.
    • to engage the public/audience/viewer/reader
    • It was difficult to engage the students at first.
    • The party is attempting to engage young voters politically.
  2. to employ a person, company, etc. to do a particular job
    • She has aready engaged a lawyer.
    • We will have to engage the services of a translator.
    • He was immediately engaged as a consultant.
    • Karl Böhm engaged her to sing in Vienna.

    Extra Examples

    • Some of the directors wanted to engage another firm.
    • They have engaged companies as subcontractors for the construction work
    • The government engages charitable organizations to help in the distribution of food
  3. to become involved with and try to understand something/somebody
    • She has the ability to engage with young minds.

    Extra Examples

    • We acknowledge the need to engage directly with these problems.
    • Our contributors are actively engaging with tradition.
  4. to begin fighting with somebody
    • He ordered his men to engage the enemy.
    • The fleet sailed out of Cadiz to engage with the enemy.
  5. when a part of a machine engages, or when you engage it, it fits together with another part of the machine and the machine begins to work
    • The cogwheels are not engaging.
    • One cogwheel engages with the next.
    • Engage the clutch before selecting a gear.

    Word Origin

    • late Middle English (formerly also as ingage): from French engager, ultimately from the base of gage, ‘a pledge or deposit offered as a guarantee’. The word originally meant ‘to pawn or pledge something’, later ‘pledge oneself (to do something)’, hence ‘enter into a contract’ (mid 16th cent.), ‘involve oneself in an activity’, ‘enter into combat’ (mid 17th cent.), giving rise to the notion ‘involve someone or something else’.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Tags: b2

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