intake

The place where water, air or other fluid is taken into a pipe or conduit; opposed to outlet.

Noun

  1. The place where water, air or other fluid is taken into a pipe or conduit; opposed to outlet.
  2. The beginning of a contraction or narrowing in a tube or cylinder.
  3. The quantity taken in.
    • the intake of air
    • In 2010 almost 120,000 people died prematurely and 108 million life years were lost—because of inadequate vitamin A intake. - 2016, Jayson Lusk, Unnaturally Delicious, →ISBN, page 74:
  4. An act or instance of taking in.
    • an intake of oxygen or food
    • The company wasn't allowed to make him 'forcibly participate in seminars and end-of-week drinks frequently ending up in excessive alcohol intake, encouraged by associates who made very large quantities of alcohol...
  5. A nostril, especially a large one.
  6. The people taken into an organization or establishment at a particular time.
    • the new intake of students
  7. The process of screening a juvenile offender to decide upon release or referral.
  8. A tract of land enclosed.
  9. Any kind of cheat or imposition; the act of taking someone in.
  10. The part of language input that is actually processed by a learner.
    • […]Due to internal and external processing restraints, only part of the input becomes intake, only part of the intake becomes acquired, and only part of the acquired intake can be used by the learner. - 1994, David J....

Origin

From English dialectal (Northern England/Scotland), deverbal of take in, equivalent to in- + take. More at in-, take.

Forms

intakes

Derived

adequate intake air intake avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder intake manifold intake silencer intake system intake valve

Verb

  1. To take in or draw in; to bring in from outside.
    • Well, I "intook" the general situation west of the Mississippi because I did not get much of a chance to see things east of the Mississippi. - 1937, Franklin D. Roosevelt, press conference:
    • The particle concentration in the ascending hot current of the combustion product have^([sic]) been measured by intaking the current into the counter close to the sample plate in the furnace. - 1968, Margaret A....
    • I deduced that if I am intaking the same amount of calories that I always did during Induction, but I am causing my metabolic rate to slow down, it makes sense that the same amount of calories taken in will not burn off...

Forms

intakes intaking intook intaken

Derived

intaker