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A Writer's Dictionary:

make use of someone Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with M » make nothing of someone ... makeover » make use of someone


use
verb used, using
    1. To put to a particular purpose.
      Thesaurus: utilize, employ, exercise, exploit, handle, manipulate, wield.
    2. To consume; to take something as fuel.
      Thesaurus: spend, expend, exhaust, waste.
    3. To treat someone as a means to benefit oneself; to exploit them.
    4. slang
      To take (eg drugs or alcohol) regularly.
    5. old use
      To behave (well or badly) towards someone.
noun
    1. The act of using.
      Thesaurus: employment, exploitation, utilization, application, practice, performance, exercise, handling, management, treatment, technique, manipulation.
    2. The state of being (able to be) used.
      Example: go out of use
      Example: not in use
    3. A practical purpose a thing can be put to.
    4. The quality of serving a practical purpose
      Example: It's no use complaining
      Example: Is this spanner any use?
      Thesaurus: utility, usefulness, helpfulness, serviceability, practicality, convenience, effectiveness, expedience, merit, value, advantage.
    5. The ability or power to use something (eg a limb).
      Example: lost the use of her leg after the accident
    6. The length of time a thing is, will be or has remained serviceable.
      Example: should give you plenty of use
    7. The habit of using; custom.
Idiom: have no use for something or someone
    To have no need of it or them.
    colloq
    To dislike or despise it or them.
Idiom: make use of someone
    To exploit them.
Idiom: make use of something
    To put it to a practical purpose.
Idiom: use by
    Said of perishable food: recommended to be consumed by the specified date. Also as adj.
      Example: use by Dec 99
      Example: The use-by date was clearly marked
Idiom: used to something or someone (used to doing something, used to being something)
    Accustomed to it or them, or to doing or being it. See also separate entry used to.
      Example: She's not used to working so fast
      Example: used to being in charge of two hundred people
      Example: The puppies haven't got used to us yet
      Thesaurus: accustomed to, experienced in, practised at.
Idiom: used up
    colloq
    Tired or exhausted.
Etymology: 13c: from French user, from Latin usus, from uti to use.

Phrasal Verb: use something up
    To exhaust supplies, etc.To finish off an amount left over.


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