switch - verb and noun A switch is a device for making and breaking the connection in an electrical circuit in e.g. a light, radio, TV or heater. We switch these things on and off. We also turn them on and off. We can turn them down or up, but we cannot switch them down or up: - You call that music? It's a terrible row! Either turn it down or switch it off.
If you switch to something different, you change suddenly to a different task or activity from what you were doing before. We can use switch or change in all these examples, but switch is more dramatic: - Would you mind switching / changing places with me so that I can sit next to my child?
- I had to switch / change planes in New York. There was no direct service to Miami.
- I was going nowhere so I decided to switch / change jobs.
- I think you would create more space if you switched / changed / moved the furniture around.
Because of its dramatic quality, switch is frequently used in newspaper headlines. These three examples all appeared in the Independent daily newspaper on 28 or 29 January. See if you can work out the meaning. The answers are below: - Abel Xavair set to switch to Liverpool.
- Switch to euro uncovers Ireland's excessive prices.
- Gang switched signals to help refugees.
Abel Xaviar, the Portuguese defender, is ready (= set) to move from Everton across town to Liverpool football club. The changeover or switch from the Irish punt to the euro has revealed the high cost of certain goods. A criminal group of men (= gang) changed or switched train signals from green to red so that trains would stop to allow refugees to climb on board.
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