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Từ điển Oxford Advanced Learner 8th
favour
fa·vour [favour favours favoured favouring] (especially US favor)noun, verb BrE [ˈfeɪvə(r)] NAmE [ˈfeɪvər] noun HELP 1. countable a thing that you do to help sb • Could you do me a favour and pick up Sam from school today? • Can I ask a favour? •I would never ask for any favours from her. •I'm going as a favour to Ann, not because I want to. •I'll ask Steve to take it. He owes me a favour. •Thanks for helping me out. I'll return the favour (= help you because you have helped me) some time. •Do yourself a favour (= help yourself) and wear a helmet on the bike. APPROVAL 2. uncountable approval or support for sb/sth • The suggestion to close the road has found favour with (= been supported by) local people. • The programme has lost favour with viewers recently. •an athlete who fell from favour after a drugs scandal • (formal)The government looks with favour upon (= approves of) the report's recommendations. •She's not in favour with (= supported or liked by) the media just now. •It seems Tim is back in favour with the boss (= the boss likes him again). BETTER TREATMENT 3. uncountable treatment that is generous to one person or group in a way that seems unfair to others Syn: ↑bias •As an examiner, she showed no favour to any candidate. PARTY GIFT 4. favorsplural (NAmE) = ↑party favors SEX 5. favoursplural (old-fashioned)agreement to have sex with sb •demands for sexual favours more at curry favour at ↑curry v., without fear or favour at ↑fear n., the cards/odds are stacked in your favour at ↑stacked Word Origin: Middle English (in the noun sense ‘liking, preference’): via Old French from Latin favor, from favere ‘show kindness to’ (related to fovere ‘cherish’). Example Bank: •Although I am friends with the tennis ace, I don't expect any favours from him on court. •Artists sought the favour of wealthy patrons. •As a personal favour to me, please don't release my story to the press. •Depth of training is looked upon with favour by many employers. •Do yourself a favour and cut your credit cards in half. •Early in his musical career he abandoned blues in favour of jazz. •Environmental conservation generally works in favour of maintaining the status quo. •He is strongly in favour of capital punishment. •He needed another favour from her. •He stood in high favour at the court of Lewis the Pious. •He tried to curry favour with the teachers. •Her political views have not found favour in recent years. •I came here to ask you a big favour. •I don't expect any favours from my friends on the tennis court. •I'll ask Jane. She owes me a favour. •In the Christian tradition, the world exists only as an act of divine favour. •No one was willing to speak out in favour of their colleague. •Rodrigo accepted the favours bestowed on him by the new king. •She argued in favour of this policy. •She had one last favour to ask her brother. •She is too popular with the public to find much favour with the critics. •Thanks very much. I'll return the favour one day. •The High Court found in favour of the plaintiffs. •The bishop was said to have enjoyed the king's favour. •The committee came down in favour of setting up a national body. •The golf tournament went in the Americans' favour. •The senior officials were punished and rapidly fell from favour. •This argument found favour among advocates of multiculturalism. •This did not meet with public favour. •This idea has long since fallen out of favour. •This piece of software has two points in its favour: it's fast and inexpensive. •Traditionally, vigilante groups have found greater favour on the political right. •Why are we trying to court the favour of critics? •an argument in favour of censorship •It seems Tim is back in favour with the boss. •She's not in favour with the media just now. •The government looks with favour upon the report's recommendations. •The show has lost favour with viewers recently. •The suggestion to close the road has found favour with local people. Idioms: ↑do me a favour! ▪ ↑do somebody no favours ▪ ↑in favour ▪ ↑in somebody's favour verb PREFER 1. ~ sth | ~ (sb) doing sth to prefer one system, plan, way of doing sth, etc. to another •Many countries favour a presidential system of government. •It's a resort favoured by families with young children. TREAT BETTER 2. ~ sb to treat sb better than you treat other people, especially in an unfair way •The treaty seems to favour the US. •My parents always favoured my older brother. HELP 3. ~ sth to provide suitable conditions for a particular person, group, etc •The warm climate favours many types of tropical plants. LOOK LIKE PARENT 4. ~ sb (old-fashioned or NAmE)to look like one of your parents or older relations •She definitely favours her father. Verb forms: Word Origin: Middle English (in the noun sense ‘liking, preference’): via Old French from Latin favor, from favere ‘show kindness to’ (related to fovere ‘cherish’). Example Bank: •Haitians especially favour seafoods. •He favoured some individuals at the expense of others. •I personally favour this last option. •News coverage should not favour one party over another. •Pot plants are increasingly favoured as gifts by guests. •She continues to favour large-scale developments. •The Democrat candidate is favoured for re-election. •The polls slightly favour the Republicans. •The prime minister is thought to favour an early referendum on the issue. •We strongly favour reform of the system. •It's a resort favoured by families with young children.
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