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pick up

  1. take hold of and lift or move someone or something.
    "I reached out and picked up a magazine"
    synonyms: lift, take up, raise, hoist, scoop up, gather up, seize, snatch up, grab
  2. go somewhere to collect someone, typically in one's car.
    "will you pick the children up from school?"
    synonyms: fetch, collect, go to get, go/come and get, call for, go/come for, give someone a lift, give someone a ride
  3. casually strike up a conversation with a stranger, with the aim of having sex with them.
    "one night I picked up a stranger in a bar"
    synonyms: take up with, make advances to, get off with, pull, cop off with
  4. return to a point made by someone in order to criticize it.
    "she picked him up on one niggling point"
  5. make someone feel more energetic and cheerful.
    "songs to pick you up and make you feel good"
  6. stand up again after a fall.
    "Emily picked herself up off the grass"
  7. collect something that has been left elsewhere.
    "Wanda came over to pick up her things"
  8. obtain, acquire, or learn something, especially in an informal way.
    "he had picked up a little Russian from his father"
    synonyms: find, discover, locate, come across, stumble across, happen on, chance on, unearth, obtain, come by, come to have, get, receive, procure, secure, take/get possession of, acquire, purchase, buy, get hold of, get/lay one's hands on, get one's mitts on, bag, land, net, learn, get to know, acquire (a knowledge of), acquire skill in, become competent/proficient in, master, digest, imbibe, assimilate, absorb, take in, get the hang of, hear, hear tell, find out, get wind of, be informed of, be told, be made aware of, be given to understand, glean, discern, become conscious/aware of, observe, notice, perceive
  9. become better; improve.
    "my luck's picked up"
    synonyms: improve, get better, recover, mend, be on the road to recovery, rally, make a comeback, bounce back, perk up, look up, take a turn for the better, turn the/a corner, be on the mend, develop, make headway, progress, make progress, advance
  10. detect or receive a signal or sound, especially by means of electronic apparatus.
    "we've picked up a distress signal"
    synonyms: receive, detect, get, hear
  11. resume something.
    "let's pick up where we left off yesterday"
    synonyms: begin again, begin, take up, start again, start, resume, recommence, carry on, go on, continue

People also ask
5 days ago · Kids Definition ; a · to take hold of and lift. picked the book up ; b · to gather together : collect. picked up every piece ; c · to clean up : tidy.
to start a sexual or romantic relationship with someone you do not know, by talking to that person and giving them a lot of attention:.
verb · tr to gather up in the hand or hands · tr to acquire, obtain, or purchase casually, incidentally, etc · tr to catch (a disease) · intr to improve in ...
the act of collecting goods or people from a particular place: Recyclable materials can be left on the sidewalk for pickup.
pick up in American English · 1. to grasp and raise or lift; take up · 2. to get, gain, find, or learn, esp. · 3. to stop for and take or bring along · 4. to ...
pick up · ​to get better, stronger, etc.; to improve. Trade usually picks up in the spring. · ​(informal) to start again; to continue. Let's pick up where we ...
/pɪk əp/ · verb. take and lift upward. synonyms: gather up, lift up · verb. take up by hand. “He picked up the book and started to read” · verb. eat by pecking ...
pickup in American English · 1. the act of picking up, as in fielding a rapidly rolling baseball · 2. the process or power of increasing in speed; acceleration.
noun. an improvement, as in health, business conditions, work, production, etc. Informal. pick-me-up. Informal.
1. as in to master. to acquire complete knowledge, understanding, or skill in he has a knack for picking up a language in a few weeks ; 3. as in to buy. to get ...