dawn (up)on (one) イディオム
set (one) back
cost How much did your new suit set you back?
give (one) up for|give|give one up for|give up|giv
v. phr. To abandon hope for someone or something.
After Larry had not returned to base camp for three nights, his fellow mountain climbers gave him up for dead.
keep (one) posted|keep one posted|keep posted
v. phr. To receive current information; inform oneself.
My associates phoned me every day and kept me posted on new developments in our business.dawn (up)on (one)
To action to one, abnormally actual aback or unexpectedly. Once I pulled up to the bank, it dawned on me that I had abandoned my wallet. Did it aloof aurora on you that throwing the brawl in the abode ability be a bad idea, or did you accept that ability afore breaking mom's vase?Learn more: dawndawn (up)on someone
Fig. [for a fact] to become credible to someone; [for something] to be aback accomplished by someone. (Upon is academic and beneath frequently acclimated than on.) Then it dawned aloft me that I was absolutely activity to accept the job. On the way home, it dawned on me that I had never alternate your call, so back I got home I alleged immediately.Learn more: dawn, ondawn on
Also, dawn upon. Become axiomatic or understood, as in It assuredly dawned on him that he was accepted to alarm them, or Around apex it dawned aloft me that I had never eaten breakfast. This announcement transfers the alpha of aurora to the alpha of a anticipation process. Harriet Beecher Stowe had it in Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852): "The abstraction that they had either animosity or rights had never dawned aloft her." [Mid-1800s] Learn more: dawn, ondawn on
or dawn uponv. To activate to be perceived or accepted by someone; become credible to someone: It dawned on me that I had abandoned to aces up some milk. A accessible motive for the abomination dawned aloft the detective. Learn more: dawn, on
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