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hold on

A2 neutral inseparable intransitive
In simple words

To wait a moment, to keep tight hold of something, or to keep going even when things are hard.

Literal meaning: To grip something and keep holding it — transparent for the physical sense.

Meanings

1 A2 neutral

To wait, especially briefly, often used as a direct instruction.

"Hold on — I need to grab my keys before we leave."

"Hold on, I'll be right with you."

— Ubiquitous in everyday speech and television; standard telephone phrase
Grammar: inseparable
2 A2 neutral

To grip something firmly with your hand to avoid falling or losing it.

"Hold on tight — the path gets slippery ahead."

Grammar: inseparable
3 B1 idiomatic neutral

To persevere or endure through a difficult situation, often with the hope that things will improve.

"Things are tough right now, but just hold on — it'll get better."

"Hold on, pain ends."

— Widely cited motivational saying; slogan and tattoo phrase popularized across social media
Grammar: inseparable
Usage notes

Extremely common in everyday speech. 'Hold on' as an instruction to wait is used constantly in phone calls and conversations. The grip sense is physically transparent. The perseverance sense is common in motivational contexts. Often shortened to just 'hold on a second.'

Commonly used with

second moment tight railing rope phone hope

Forms

Base
hold on
I/you/we/they
3rd person
holds on
he/she/it
Past simple
held on
yesterday
Past participle
held on
have + pp
-ing form
holding on
continuous

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Synonyms

hang on hold tight keep hold stand by stay on the line wait

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