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Capture   /kˈæptʃər/   Listen
verb
Capture  v. t.  (past & past part. captured; pres. part. capturing)  
1.
To seize or take possession of by force, surprise, or stratagem; to overcome and hold; to secure by effort.
2.
To record or make a lasting representation of (sound or images); as, to capture an event on videotape; the artist captured the expression of grief on his face.
3.
(Games) To take control of, or remove from play; as, to capture a piece in chess.
4.
To exert a strong psychological influence on; as, to capture the heart of a maiden; to capture the attention of the nation.
5.
(Computers) To record (data) in a computer-readable form; as, to capture a transaction in a database. "Her heart is like some fortress that has been captured."



noun
Capture  n.  
1.
The act of seizing by force, or getting possession of by superior power or by stratagem; as, the capture of an enemy, a vessel, or a criminal. "Even with regard to captures made at sea."
2.
The securing of an object of strife or desire, as by the power of some attraction.
3.
The thing taken by force, surprise, or stratagem; a prize; prey.
Synonyms: Seizure; apprehension; arrest; detention.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Capture" Quotes from Famous Books



... had four doors, so that he could see around him on every side. He would often in the day-time change himself into a salmon and hide in the water called Franangursfors, and he thought over what trick the gods might devise to capture him there. One day while he sat in his house, he took flax and yarn, and with it made meshes like those of a net, a fire burning in front of him. Then he became aware that the gods were near at hand, for Odin had seen out of Hlidskjalf ...
— Folk-Lore and Legends; Scandinavian • Various

... slaying his cattle—not only for food but as often as not for mere devilment—has to ride into Hall's Creek and report to the police, and so gives time for the offenders to disappear. The troopers, when they do make a capture of the culprits, bring them in on chains, to the police quarters. By the Warden, through a tame boy as interpreter, they are tried, and either acquitted and sent back to their country or sentenced to a turn of imprisonment ...
— Spinifex and Sand - Five Years' Pioneering and Exploration in Western Australia • David W Carnegie

... coerce, necessitate, constrain, oblige, make; impel, obtrude, extort, wrest; capture, storm; rape, ravish. Antonyms: ...
— Putnam's Word Book • Louis A. Flemming

... Gladstone, from whom he had refused office in 1880, without, however, breaking with the Liberal party, and by the Conservatives, who instinctively felt him their property, but were not yet quite clear as to how they were to finally capture him. That was decided in 1886, when Mr. Goschen voted in the majority that killed the Home Rule Bill, and more definitely in the following year when Randolph Churchill resigned the Exchequer in a fit of ...
— A Writer's Recollections (In Two Volumes), Volume II • Mrs. Humphry Ward

... attempts to capture the ford, and pressed us hard on the right. This part of our line made little progress, and was forced at times to assume simply ...
— History of the Second Massachusetts Regiment of Infantry: Beverly Ford. • Daniel Oakey


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