Synonyms for see after
Grammar : Adj, verb |
Spell : see |
Phonetic Transcription : si |
Top 10 synonyms for see after Other synonyms for the word see after
- accomplish
- administer
- alert
- all ears
- attend
- baby-sit
- bulwark
- cater to
- chaperon
- chaperone
- chary
- cherish
- circumspect
- conduct
- control
- convoy
- corral
- cover up
- defend
- direct
- do for
- fend
- foster
- glued
- guard
- guarded
- handle
- heedful
- hooked
- keen
- keep an eye on
- keep in view
- keep tabs on
- keep under surveillance
- lookout
- maintain
- manage
- mind
- minister to
- not missing a trick
- nurse
- nurture
- observant
- observe
- on guard
- on one's toes
- on the ball
- on the job
- on the qui vive
- on the watch
- open-eyed
- oversee
- patrol
- perform
- police
- prepared
- preserve
- protect
- ready
- ride herd on
- ride shotgun for
- safeguard
- save
- screen
- secure
- see after
- see to
- serve
- shelter
- shepherd
- shield
- shotgun
- sit
- stonewall
- superintend
- supervise
- suspicious
- take care of
- take under wing
- tend
- unsleeping
- vigilant
- wait on
- wakeful
- wary
- watch
- watch out for
- watch over
- wide-awake
- with eyes peeled
Définition of see after
Origin :- Old English seon "to see, look, behold; observe, perceive, understand; experience, visit, inspect" (contracted class V strong verb; past tense seah, past participle sewen), from Proto-Germanic *sekhwanan (cf. Old Saxon, Old High German sehan, Middle High German, German sehen, Old Frisian sia, Middle Dutch sien, Old Norse sja, Gothic saihwan), from PIE root *sekw- (2) "to see," which is probably identical with *sekw- (1) "to follow" (see sequel), a root which produced words for "say" in Greek and Latin, and also words for "follow" (cf. Latin sequor), but "opinions differ in regard to the semantic starting-point and sequences" [Buck]. Thus see might originally mean "follow with the eyes."
- Used in Middle English to mean "behold in the imagination or in a dream" (c.1200), "to recognize the force of (a demonstration)," also c.1200. Sense of "escort" (e.g. to see someone home) first recorded 1607 in Shakespeare. Meaning "to receive as a visitor" is attested from c.1500. Gambling sense of "equal a bet" is from 1590s. See you as a casual farewell first attested 1891. Let me see as a pausing statement is recorded from 1510s. To have seen everything as a hyperbolic expression of astonishment is from 1957.
- When you have seen one of their Pictures, you have seen all. [Blake, c.1811]
- As in watchful : adj on the lookout
- As in tend : verb care for
- As in guard : verb protect, watch
Antonyms for see after
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019