setup (third-person singular simple presentsets up,present participlesetting up,simple past and past participleset up)
- (transitive) To makeready for use.
Weset up the sprinkler.
- (transitive) To arrange logically.
Set up my CD collection.
- (transitive) To cause to happen.
Even a minor change canset up new bugs.
2018 July 3, Phil McNulty, “Colombia 1 - 1 England”, inBBC Sport[1]:England's famous victorysets up a meeting with Sweden in Samara on Saturday
- (transitive) Totrap orensnare.
I've got toset up that tasty rabbit.
- (transitive) To arrange for anoutcome; totamper orrig.
The election wasset up!
- (intransitive) Toprepare orget ready.
- Used with an implied object obvious from context.
Give me a minute — I'm stillsetting up.
The band issetting up.
- (intransitive) Togel orharden.
Give the cement 24 hours toset up before walking on it.
- (intransitive) To level torise in one part of a body of water, especially a shallow one, because of a storm surge caused by persistent wind.
The levelset up at the south end of the lake after a day of north winds.
- (transitive) To provide the money or other support that someone needs for an important task or activity.
Winning the lottery hasset themup for life.
A good breakfast reallysets youup for the day.
- (transitive) To establish someone in a business or position.
After he left college, his fatherset himup in the family business.
Sheset herselfup as an interior designer.
- (informal, transitive, criminology) Totrick orlure (someone) in order toentrap them.
- Synonyms:frame,frame up,put up
They claimed that they weren't selling drugs, but that they'd beenset up by the police.
- (transitive) To make (someone)proud orconceited (often in passive).
1992, Hilary Mantel,A Place of Greater Safety, Harper Perennial, published2007, pages286–7:M. Robespierre looked at me sideways and smiled and said to Madame, ‘You're a young lady after my own heart.’ Thisset herup for the day.
- (transitive) Tomatchmake; to arrange adate between two people.
- (sports, transitive) To create agoalscoring opportunity (for).
2011 October 1, John Sinnott, “Aston Villa 2 - 0 Wigan”, inBBC Sport[2]:Just past the hour Agbonlahorset up the second, crossing for Bent to net.
2024 May 6, Sid Lowe, “Portu’s brilliant burst seals Girona’s top-four fairytale in the perfect way”, inThe Guardian[3],→ISSN:On 71.05, Portu brilliantlyset up Yangel Herrera, only for Marc-André ter Stegen to make a sensational save.
- (dated, intransitive) To begin business or a scheme of life.
toset up in trade; toset up for oneself
- Toprofess openly; to makepretensions.
- 1744 (first printed)Jonathan Swift,On the Testimony of Conscience
- those men whoset up for morality without regard to religion, are generally virtuous but in part
- (transitive) Tofound; to start (a business, scheme)
2017 April 6, Samira Shackle, “On the frontline with Karachi’s ambulance drivers”, inthe Guardian[4]:With the help of his wife Bilquis, heset up a maternal health clinic and a centre for abandoned children.
- (boxing) To deceive an opponent and capitalize on their reactions with a certain technique or maneuver.
1950, Jack Dempsey, chapter 23, inChampionship Fighting: Explosive Punching and Aggressive Defense:When you make an opening you merely cause an opponent to uncover a target somewhere on his person. But when youset up an opponent, you knock him off balance with one punch so that he should be an open target for a following punch. Unless he's knocked off balance, he's notset up.
1997 September 24, Joe Duffy, “TRIBUTES TO THE MAN AND THE BOXER”, inHartford Courant[5]:Writer Danny Wamboldt of Ring magazine said, "Only Willie knew how toset up his opponents masterfully and then move in." Wamboldt, a former New England bantamweight champion and current national president of the Veteran Boxers Association, said that one of Pep's opponents said of his dazzling speed: "It was the first time he had been surrounded by one man."
- To cause to take flight; toflush into the air.
- (obsolete, printing)Synonym ofcompose (To arrange (types) in a composing stick for printing; to typeset)
to ready something for use
- Azerbaijani:quraşdırmaq (az)
- Bulgarian:установявам (bg)(ustanovjavam)
- Catalan:preparar (ca),muntar (ca)
- Czech:připravit (cs)
- Dutch:bereiden (nl),voorbereiden (nl),opzetten (nl),klaarzetten (nl)
- Egyptian: (grg)
- Esperanto:akomodi (eo)
- Estonian:paigaldama
- Finnish:asentaa (fi),valmistella (fi),ottaa käyttöön
- French:mettre en place (fr),installer (fr)
- German:aufbauen (de),fürdenEinsatzvorbereiten (de),einrichten (de),installieren (de)
- Hungarian:beállít (hu),felállít (hu),összerak (hu)
- Irish:cuir ar bun
- Italian:preparare (it),installare (it),approntare (it),mettere a punto,creare (it)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish:دامەزراندن(damezrandin)
- Latin:sistō (la)
- Maori:whakakaupapa
- Neapolitan:apparà
- Ottoman Turkish:دوزمك(düzmek)
- Polish:przygotowywać (pl) impf,przygotować (pl) pf
- Portuguese:preparar (pt)
- Russian:устана́вливать (ru) impf(ustanávlivatʹ),установи́ть (ru) pf(ustanovítʹ)
- Spanish:disponer (es),montar (es),configurar (es)
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to arrange for an outcome
setup (comparativemoreset up,superlativemostset up)
- In a position to function;ready.
Now that I'mset up, this will take moments!
in a position to function