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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Vocabulary

Take on/tend to

Hello,

I would like to have a better approach to the meaning (one of the meanings) of "tend to".

For instance, given the following situation:

You are at work, and your boss come up to you and ask you to switch to another task for a while, because it is quite urgent.

Could be said: "Please, Antony, could you stop doing that and take on this for a while?".

But also: "Please, Antony, could you stop doing that and tend to this for a while?".

Thank you so much in advance.
  

Top answer

". -- OK. 'Take on' = assume responsibility for doing.

  • ".
  • -- OK.
  • 'Take on' = assume responsibility for doing.
  • -- OK.
  • 'Tend to' = do what is necessary for.
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2 Answers
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Could be said: "Please, Antony, could you stop doing that and take on this for a while?". -- OK. 'Take on' = assume responsibility for doing.

But also: "Please, Antony, could you stop doing that and tend to this for a while?".-- OK. 'Tend to' = do what is necessary for.

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