(attend)
21attend — 01. Please let me know if you are unable to [attend] class. 02. Students whose [attendance] falls below 80% will receive a warning letter. 03. The funeral of Mahatma Gandhi was [attended] by millions of people. 04. We [attended] UCLA together… …
22attend — verb ADVERB ▪ regularly ▪ to attend church regularly VERB + ATTEND ▪ be able to, be unable to ▪ be asked to, be invited to …
23attend — at|tend W2S2 [əˈtend] v formal [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: atendre, from Latin attendere, from ad to + tendere to stretch ] 1.) [I and T] to go to an event such as a meeting or a class ▪ Only 12 people attended the meeting. ▪ Please… …
24attend — at|tend [ ə tend ] verb *** 1. ) intransitive or transitive to be present at an event or activity: Everyone in the office was expected to attend. I ve voiced my opinion at every meeting I ve attended. a ) to go regularly to a place, for example,… …
25attend — verb Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French atendre, from Latin attendere, literally, to stretch to, from ad + tendere to stretch more at thin Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. to pay attention to 2. to …
26attend to sb — UK US attend to sb/sth Phrasal Verb with attend({{}}/əˈtend/ verb [I or T] ► to deal with a task, problem, etc.: »We have some urgent business to attend to. »A recent study shows that they have failed to attend to clients needs and demands …
27attend — verb 1 (I, T) to go to an event such as a meeting or a class: Only 7 people attended the meeting. | Please let us know if you are unable to attend. see join 1 2 (I, T) to go regularly to a school, church etc: All children between the ages of 5… …
28attend — v. 1 tr. a be present at (attended the meeting). b go regularly to (attends the local school). 2 intr. a be present (many members failed to attend). b be present in a serving capacity; wait. 3 a tr. escort, accompany (the king was attended by… …
29attend — Synonyms and related words: accompany, administer to, aid, animadvert, appear, assist, assister, associate, associate with, assort with, attend on, attend to, audit, auscultate, band together, be all ears, be at, be present at, bear, become of,… …
30attend — [13] Etymologically, attend means ‘stretch to’. It comes originally from Latin attendere, a compound verb formed from the prefix ad ‘to’ and tendere ‘stretch’ (a descendant of an Indo European base *ten , *ton ‘stretch’ which also produced, among …