take to one's bed
Appearance
English
[edit]Verb
[edit]take to one's bed (third-person singular simple present takes to one's bed, present participle taking to one's bed, simple past took to one's bed, past participle taken to one's bed)
- (intransitive) To become bedbound due to sickness or infirmity.
- 1873, Charles Dickens, The Poems of Adelaide A. Procter, Introduction:
- And so the time came when she could move about no longer, and took to her bed.
- 1883 December, Harper’s Magazine, page 135:
- By-and-by he took to his bed.
- 1901, Andrew Lang, “The Maiden with the Wooden Helmet”, in The Violet Fairy Book:
- Each day he grew more and more wretched, till at length he took to his bed and never got up.
- 1920, D. H. Lawrence, chapter 16, in Women in Love:
- He liked sometimes to be ill enough to take to his bed.
- 2008 October 23, David Smith, “Eminem set for comeback”, in New Zealand Herald, retrieved 19 September 2011:
- He says he took to his bed for a year and couldn't write.
Translations
[edit]to become bedbound due to sickness or infirmity
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