Chase
61chase — See: give chase, go chase oneself, lead a merry chase …
62chase up — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms chase up : present tense I/you/we/they chase up he/she/it chases up present participle chasing up past tense chased up past participle chased up 1) to find out what is being done about something My department… …
63chase*/ — [tʃeɪs] verb I 1) [I/T] to follow someone or something quickly in order to catch them Syn: pursue The band have often been chased down the street by enthusiastic fans.[/ex] I chased after the robbers for more than a mile.[/ex] 2) [T] to follow… …
64chase — i. To follow another aircraft either to observe its behavior (as in the case of a chase pilot), warn of a visible malfunction or external damage, or to assist it in landing. ii. To give chase (i.e., to follow a hostile aircraft and attempt to get …
65chase — 1. verb 1) the cat chased the mouse Syn: pursue, run after, give chase to, follow; hunt, track, trail; informal tail 2) chasing young girls Syn: pursue, run after, make advances to, flirt with; …
66chase — v 1. pursue, give chase, run after, fly after, follow after, make after, take off after, Brit. chevy; hound, dog, bedog; shadow, trail, haunt, Inf. tail; hunt, stalk, course, trace, track, run down. 2. suit, court, Inf. spark, Inf. court and… …
67chase — Verb: To pursue. Noun: The pursuit of beasts of the chase; a hunting ground. See beasts of the chase …
68chase — see a stern chase is a long chase …
69chase — 1. noun /tʃeɪs/ a) The action of the verb to chase . b) A hunt. 2. verb /tʃeɪs/ a) To pursue, to follow at speed …
70Chase — A private forest, land reserved for hunting by a magnate. Such forests required royal permission, necessitating a substantial *fine. The citizens of London had rights of the chase in Middlesex and the Chilterns. Cf. Disafforestation; Forest,… …