Deadline.com: ‘Take Me Home’ Filmmaker Liz Sargent On Making Movie About Her Sister & “The Quiet, Invisible Families”: Watch Clip – EFM
‘Take Me Home’ Filmmaker Liz Sargent On Making Movie About Her Sister & “The Quiet, Invisible Families”: Watch Clip – EFM
EXCLUSIVE: Liz Sargent’s drama Take Me Home, which won the U.S. Dramatic Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award, at Sundance is screening is also an acquisitions title at the Berlinale. The pic is being sold ...
The Hollywood Reporter: ‘Take Me Home’ Review: A Story of Caregiving Challenges Balances Dark Truths With Charm and Humor
‘Take Me Home’ Review: A Story of Caregiving Challenges Balances Dark Truths With Charm and Humor
IndieWire: Sundance’s ‘Take Me Home’ Turned a Personal Story Into an Anti-Ableist Creative Undertaking
Sundance’s ‘Take Me Home’ Turned a Personal Story Into an Anti-Ableist Creative Undertaking
The meaning of TAKE is to get into one's hands or into one's possession, power, or control. How to use take in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Take.
Synonyms for TAKE: hold, grasp, grip, clasp, lay hold of, catch, hang on to, hold on (to); Antonyms of TAKE: drop, liberate, release, give, free, discharge, pass, deliver
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'take.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors.
Bring and take are sometimes used in the same contexts, which makes people who feel strongly about such things very uncomfortable. Just what is the deal with bring and take?