R || RUN ||

RP | audio / video Repetition Drill
run v. run ran run running run 

run out -- run out, ran out, run out, running out, run out
run down -- run down, ran down, run down, running down, run down (rundown n)
run up -- run up, ran up, run up, running up, run up (runup n)
run off -- run off, ran off, run off, running off, run off (runoff n)

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run

/take its course
To follow its natural progression or development: Should we let the illness run its course?



  • In the Long Run. (prepositional phrase) eventually, over time. ...
  • Make a Run for It. ...
  • Make Someone's Blood Run Cold. ...
  • Run Around in Circles. ...
  • Run a Fever. ...
  • Run a Tight Ship. ...
  • Run a Temperature. ...
  • Run Around Like a Chicken With Its Head Cut Off.

run

1. n. a session or period of time spent doing something; a period of time when something happens. The market had a good run today.
2. tv. to transport contraband, alcohol, or drugs. Harry the Horse used to run booze during prohibition.
3. n. an act of transporting contraband. Four soldiers were killed during a run.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

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