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- nounkeeping (noun)
- the action of owning, maintaining, or protecting something:"the keeping of dogs" · "careful record-keeping is needed"
verbkeeping (present participle)- have or retain possession of:"return one copy to me, keeping the other for your files" · "my father would keep the best for himself" · "she had trouble keeping her balance"
- put or store in a regular place:"his personal work was kept securely in an upstairs studio"
- cause to continue in a specified condition, position, course, etc.:"the guidance system keeps the machine on course" · "he kept his eyes on the road" · "keep your hands off me" · "she might be kept alive artificially by machinery"
- continue in a specified condition, position, course, etc.:"I kept quiet while Emily talked on" · "keep left along the wall"
- continue doing or do repeatedly or habitually:"he keeps going on about the accident"
- (of a perishable commodity) remain in good condition:"fresh ginger does not keep well"
- retain one's place in or on (a seat or saddle, the ground, etc.) against opposition or difficulty:"are you able to keep your saddle?"
- make (someone) do something for a period of time:"I have kept her waiting too long"
- delay or detain; cause to be late:"I won't keep you, I know you've got a busy evening"
- archaiccontinue to follow (a way, path, or course):"the friars and soldiers removed, keeping their course toward Jericho"
- provide for the sustenance of (someone):"he had to keep his large family in the manner he had chosen"
- own and look after (an animal) for pleasure or profit:"they raised pigs and kept a pony or two"
- own and manage (a shop or business).
- guard; protect:"the boy keeps the sheep" · "“God keep you,” he muttered"
- support (someone, especially a woman) financially in return for sexual favors:"a kept woman"
- honor or fulfill (a commitment or undertaking):"I'll keep my promise, naturally"
- observe (a religious occasion) in the prescribed manner:"today's consumers do not keep the Sabbath"
- pay due regard to (a law or custom):"if you kept small rules, you could break the big ones"
- make written entries in (a diary) on a regular basis:"the master kept a weekly journal"
- write down as (a record):"keep a note of the whereabouts of each item"
Originlate Old English cēpan ‘seize, take in’, also ‘care for, attend to’, of unknown origin.Similar and Opposite Wordsnoun- the action of owning, maintaining, or protecting something:
verb- cause to continue in a specified condition, position, course, etc.:
- provide for the sustenance of (someone):
- honor or fulfill (a commitment or undertaking):
- observe (a religious occasion) in the prescribed manner:
- pay due regard to (a law or custom):
Bokep
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