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Lorena
take up, start up or start?
Hello!
There are someone to help me?
Which I choose and why?
One of these is used more?
Thanks!!
Apr 21, 2016 5:18 PM
Answers · 2
2
startup and start are sometimes interchangable:
"I always start up/start my car five minutes before I leave in the winter so it warms up."
take up ~ to begin an activity that has continued or will continue for a long time.:
"I decided to take up Spanish= I decided to start learning Spanish."
"I took up football when I was nine.= I started playing football when I was nine."
Notice that the sentence with "to start" usually needs another verb, and also that here "start up" cannot be used instead of "start".
take up~ to present a problem to:
"I was having a problem with one of my colleagues, so I took it up with my boss."
"take up" can have other meanings too, ("I took up the carpet before the party so that it wouldn't get dirty." ) and whether it is right to use it depends on the circumstances.
April 21, 2016
Can you be more specific in your question? Like where do you want to use the word? Give a statement for example
April 21, 2016
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Lorena
Language Skills
English, Spanish
Learning Language
English
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