ACT

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Multiple Entries:
  ACT    act  

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
ACT/eɪsiːˈtiː/
abbreviation
  • 1 advance corporation tax.
  • 2 Australian Capital Territory.

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
act/akt/
verb
  • 1 take action; do something.

    ■ (act up) informal behave badly.

  • 2 (act for/on behalf of) represent on a contractual or legal basis.

    ■ (as adj. acting) temporarily doing the duties of another.

  • 3 take effect or have a particular effect.
  • 4 perform a fictional role in a play or film.

    ■ behave so as to appear to be: I acted dumb.

    ■ (act something out) perform a narrative as if it were a play.

noun
  • 1 a thing done.
  • 2 a simulation or pretence.

    ■ a particular type of behaviour or routine: he did his Sir Galahad act.

  • 3 Law a written ordinance of Parliament, Congress, etc.
  • 4 dated a record of the decisions or proceedings of a committee or an academic body.
  • 5 a main division of a play, ballet, or opera.
  • 6 a set performance: her one-woman poetry act.
– phrases
act of God an instance of uncontrollable natural forces in operation.
act of grace a privilege or concession that cannot be claimed as a right.
get (or be) in on the act informal become (or be) involved in a particular activity, in order to gain an advantage.
– derivatives
actability noun,
actable adjective,
acting noun.
– origin ME: from L. actus ‘event, thing done’, from act-, agere ‘do, act’, reinforced by Fr. acte.
'ACT' also found in these Oxford entries:

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