copeverb [ I ]
uk/kəʊp/us/koʊp/B2 to deal successfully with a difficult situation:
It must be really hard to cope with three young children and a job.
It's only been a year since he died - how's she coping?
He had so much pressure on him in his job that eventually he just couldn't cope.
More examples
- Will she be able to cope with the work?
- The hostages had been confined for so long that they couldn't cope with the outside world.
- Get a good night's sleep and you'll feel better able to cope.
- The teacher said that he found it difficult to cope with a class of disaffected teenagers.
- The emergency services are working at full stretch today to cope with the accident.
Thesaurus: synonyms and related words
Coping and not coping
- balancing act
- be left holding the baby idiom
- bear up
- bite
- bite off more than you can chew idiom
- cut
- head
- hold
- keep the wolf from the door idiom
- keep your head above water idiom
- keep/hold your end up idiom
- live (from) hand to mouth idiom
- live to fight another day idiom
- manage
- roll
- stride
- subsist
- subsistence
- take sth in your stride idiom
- wolf
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