cover Note that cover as verb, noun and adjective is used in a variety of different ways: If you cover something, you place something else over it to protect it or hide it or close it: - Always cover what you are cooking with a tight-fitting lid and cook it slowly.
- His desk is always covered with papers. I don't know how he can work in such a mess.
- She covered all her bedroom walls with posters of Eminem.
- There are always lots of cafes and restaurants within the covered shopping malls in British towns and cities.
cover = protection Cover can also be used to talk about protection from enemy attack or for talking about insurance. - The air force was unable to provide any sort of air cover for their ground troops.
- There was no cover of any kind, no trees, no valleys, just the endless barren plain.
- Are you covered to drive this car? Do you have proper insurance cover?
- Does your travel insurance cover you against theft or loss of valuables?
cover = address or report on a topic Cover can be used to talk about studying a subject or in a journalistic context to talk about reporting. - We haven't covered molecular biology yet. We're going to do that next term.
- He's going tocover the World Cup later this year for BBC World Service.
cover for = substitute for someone at work - Can you cover for me this afternoon while I visit my father in hospital?
- There were not enough teachers to cover for absent colleagues and some students had to be sent home.
|