succeed

succeed
[[t]səksi͟ːd[/t]]
♦♦
succeeds, succeeding, succeeded
1) VERB If you succeed in doing something, you manage to do it.

[V in -ing/n] We have already succeeded in working out ground rules with the Department of Defense...

[V in -ing/n] Some people will succeed in their efforts to stop smoking...

If they can succeed in America and Europe, then they can succeed here too.

Ant:
2) VERB If something succeeds, it works in a satisfactory way or has the result that is intended.

If marriage is to succeed in the 1990's, then people have to recognise the new pressures it is facing.

...a move which would make any future talks even more unlikely to succeed.

Ant:
3) VERB Someone who succeeds gains a high position in what they do, for example in business or politics.

...the skills and qualities needed to succeed in small and medium-sized businesses.

Ant:
4) VERB If you succeed another person, you are the next person to have their job or position.

[V n] David Rowland is almost certain to succeed him as chairman on January 1...

[V to n] The present ruler, Prince Rainier III, succeeded to the throne on 9 May 1949.

5) VERB: usu passive If one thing is succeeded by another thing, the other thing happens or comes after it.

[be V-ed] A quick divorce can be succeeded by a much longer - and more agonising - period of haggling over the fate of the family.


English dictionary. 2008.

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  • succeed — UK US /səkˈsiːd/ verb ► [I] if you succeed, you achieve something that you have been trying to do or get, and if a plan or a piece of work succeeds, it has the results that you wanted: succeed in sth »He is determined to succeed in the property… …   Financial and business terms

  • Succeed — Suc*ceed , v. i. 1. To come in the place of another person, thing, or event; to come next in the usual, natural, or prescribed course of things; to follow; hence, to come next in the possession of anything; often with to. [1913 Webster] If the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • succeed — suc·ceed /sək sēd/ vi 1: to come next after another in office or position 2 a: to take something by succession succeed ed to his mother s estate b: to acquire the rights, obligations, and charges of a decedent in property comprising an estate …   Law dictionary

  • Succeed — Suc*ceed , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Succeeded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Succeeding}.] [L. succedere, successum; sub under + cedere to go, to go along, approach, follow, succeed: cf. F. succ[ e]der. See {Cede}, and cf. {Success}.] 1. To follow in order; to… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • succeed — 1 *follow, ensue, supervene Analogous words: displace, supplant, replace, supersede Antonyms: precede 2 Succeed, prosper, thrive, flourish can mean to attain or to be attaining a desired end. Succeed (see also FOLLOW) implies little more than… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • succeed — [sək sēd′] vi. [ME succeden < L succedere, to go beneath or under, follow after < sub , under + cedere, to go: see CEDE] 1. a) to come next after another; follow; ensue b) to follow another into office, possession, etc., as by election,… …   English World dictionary

  • succeed — late 14c., come next after, take the place of another, from O.Fr. succeder (14c.), from L. succedere come after, go near to, from sub next to, after + cedere go, move (see CEDE (Cf. cede)). Meaning to continue, endure is from early 15c. The sense …   Etymology dictionary

  • succeed — When it means ‘to be successful’, succeed is followed by in + an ing form, not (unlike fail) by to: • Some local preservation enthusiasts succeeded in getting the house listed as of architectural and historic interest E. Lemarchand, 1972 …   Modern English usage

  • succeed — [v1] attain good outcome accomplish, achieve, acquire, arrive, avail, benefit, be successful, carry off*, come off*, conquer, distance, do all right*, do the trick*, earn, flourish, fulfill, gain, get, get to the top*, grow famous, hit*, make a… …   New thesaurus

  • succeed to — index inherit Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • succeed — ► VERB 1) achieve an aim or purpose. 2) attain fame, wealth, or social status. 3) take over an office, title, etc., from (someone). 4) become the new rightful holder of an office, title, etc. 5) come after and take the place of. ORIGIN Latin… …   English terms dictionary

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