attend

pronunciation

How to pronounce attend in British English: UK [əˈtend]word uk audio image

How to pronounce attend in American English: US [əˈtend] word us audio image

  • Verb:
    be present at (meetings, church services, university), etc.
    take charge of or deal with
    to accompany as a circumstance or follow as a result
    work for or be a servant to
    give heed (to)

Word Origin

attend
attend: [13] Etymologically, attend means ‘stretch to’. It comes originally from Latin attendere, a compound verb formed from the prefix ad- ‘to’ and tendere ‘stretch’ (a descendant of an Indo-European base *ten-, *ton- ‘stretch’ which also produced, among others, Latin tenēre ‘hold’ – source of English contain, maintain, obtain, etc – and English tendon, thin, and tone).By metaphorical extension ‘stretch to’ became ‘direct one’s attention to’, which was the original meaning of the verb in Old French atendre and subsequently in English. The sense ‘take care of’ developed in the 15th century, ‘be present’ much later, in the 17th century. The noun derivative attention [14] comes from Latin attentiō. Tend meaning ‘look after’ comes mainly from attend, but also partly from intend, in both cases with loss of the first syllable.=> contain, maintain, obtain, tendon, thin, tone
attend (v.)
c. 1300, "to direct one's mind or energies," from Old French atendre (12c., Modern French attendre) "to expect, wait for, pay attention," and directly from Latin attendere "give heed to," literally "to stretch toward," from ad- "to" (see ad-) + tendere "stretch" (see tenet). The notion is of "stretching" one's mind toward something. Sense of "take care of, wait upon" is from early 14c. Meaning "to pay attention" is early 15c.; that of "to be in attendance" is mid-15c. Related: Attended; attending.

Antonym

Example

1. Perhaps even mr buckmaster might attend such a meeting .
2. Us officials wanted to attend yekaterinburg as observers .
3. More important , it determines which university you attend .
4. I have pressing business to attend to .
5. There are certainly more pressing needs to attend to .

more: >How to Use "attend" with Example Sentences