date
noun /deɪt/
/deɪt/
Idioms - ‘What's the date today?’ ‘The 10th.’
- Write today's date at the top of the page.
- They haven't set a date for the wedding yet.
- We need to fix a date for the next meeting.
- I can't come on that date.
- Please give your name, address and date of birth.
- (especially North American English) name, address and birth date
- There's no word yet on a UK release date for the film.
- a start/launch/completion date
- There's no date on this letter.
- Anyone who knows of the vehicle’s whereabouts from that date until 31 October is asked to contact Bangor police station.
Extra ExamplesTopics Timea1, Historya1- Give me a couple of dates that are good for you.
- I can't give you specific dates.
- I have two meetings on that date.
- She suggested an earlier date for the meeting.
- The baby was born exactly on its due date.
- The agreement runs from that date.
- The building was not finished by the completion date.
- The closing date for applications is May 22.
- the date of the election
- We cannot accept applications received after this date.
- A trial date is expected to be announced next month.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- earlier
- earliest
- later
- …
- agree
- agree on
- arrange
- …
- stamp
- book
- after a/the date
- at a… date
- before a/the date
- …
- the big date
- at a future date
- at some future date
- …
- 1066 is the most famous date in English history.
- the biggest date in the country music calendar
- I hated history at school—I could never remember all those dates.
- What were Beethoven's dates (= the years of his birth and death)?
Extra Examples- What was the date of the Battle of Hastings?
- The painting bears the date 1626.
- Historians disagree on the cut-off date for the medieval period.
- It's difficult to put a date on when the idea started.
- A large carved stone gives the dates of birth and death of her three sons.
- The details can be added at a later date.
- The work will be carried out at a future date.
- This was an important trade route from an early date.
- a building of late Roman date
Extra ExamplesTopics Timeb1- The election is scheduled to take place at an unspecified date in the autumn.
- The building has certain features in common with cathedrals of a similar date.
- The foundations are Roman, but the rest of the building is of more recent date.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- earlier
- earliest
- later
- …
- agree
- agree on
- arrange
- …
- stamp
- book
- after a/the date
- at a… date
- before a/the date
- …
- the big date
- at a future date
- at some future date
- …
- Call me next week and we'll try and make a date.
- Next Friday? Fine—it's a date!
Extra Examples- We must make a date to have lunch.
- She wanted to arrive in time to keep her date.
- He was late, and ended up breaking their dinner date.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- dinner
- lunch
- blind
- …
- have
- find
- make
- …
- movie
- rape
- on a date
- date with
- a date with somebody I've got a date with Lucy tomorrow night.
- on a date We agreed to go out on a date.
- Do you think I should ask him out on a date?
- Paul's not coming. He's got a hot date (= an exciting one).
Collocations Marriage and divorceMarriage and divorceRomancesee also blind date, double date- fall/be (madly/deeply/hopelessly) in love (with somebody)
- be/believe in/fall in love at first sight
- be/find true love/the love of your life
- suffer (from) (the pains/pangs of) unrequited love
- have/feel/show/express great/deep/genuine affection for somebody/something
- meet/marry your husband/wife/partner/fiancé/fiancée/boyfriend/girlfriend
- have/go on a (blind) date
- be going out with/(especially North American English) dating a guy/girl/boy/man/woman
- move in with/live with your boyfriend/girlfriend/partner
- get/be engaged/married/divorced
- arrange/plan a wedding
- have a big wedding/a honeymoon/a happy marriage
- have/enter into an arranged marriage
- call off/cancel/postpone your wedding
- invite somebody to/go to/attend a wedding/a wedding ceremony/a wedding reception
- conduct/perform a wedding ceremony
- exchange rings/wedding vows/marriage vows
- congratulate/toast/raise a glass to the happy couple
- be/go on honeymoon (with your wife/husband)
- celebrate your first (wedding) anniversary
- be unfaithful to/(informal) cheat on your husband/wife/partner/fiancé/fiancée/boyfriend/girlfriend
- have an affair (with somebody)
- break off/end an engagement/a relationship
- break up with/split up with/ (informal) dump your boyfriend/girlfriend
- separate from/be separated from/leave/divorce your husband/wife
- annul/dissolve a marriage
- apply for/ask for/go through/get a divorce
- get/gain/be awarded/have/lose custody of the children
- pay alimony/child support (to your ex-wife/husband)
- She's out on a date with her new boyfriend.
- I have a date with Camilla on Friday night.
- It's a great date movie.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- dinner
- lunch
- blind
- …
- have
- find
- make
- …
- movie
- rape
- on a date
- date with
- [countable] a boyfriend or girlfriend with whom you have arranged a date
- My date is meeting me at seven.
- I need to find a date for Friday.
Wordfinder- affair
- date
- go out with somebody
- jealous
- love
- marriage
- partner
- passionate
- relationship
- romantic
- enlarge image[countable] a sweet sticky brown fruit that grows on a tree called a date palm, common in North Africa and West AsiaTopics Foodc2
particular day/year
past time/future
arrangement to meet
romantic meeting
fruit
Word Originnoun senses 1 to 5 Middle English: via Old French from medieval Latin data, feminine past participle of dare ‘give’; from the Latin formula used in dating letters, data (epistola) ‘(letter) given or delivered’, to record a particular time or place. noun sense 6 Middle English: from Old French, via Latin from Greek daktulos ‘finger’ (because of the finger-like shape of its leaves).
Idioms
to date
- until now
- To date, we have received over 200 replies.
- The exhibition contains some of his best work to date.