uptake
uptake — noun
1. how quickly and through what mechanism a substance such as oxygen, a drug, or a
how quickly and through what mechanism a substance such as oxygen, a drug, or a nutrient enters and becomes absorbed by a living body, tissue, or system
The doctor measured Ramón's oxygen uptake during the exercise test.
collocation: oxygen uptake
After eating, Vivek's body showed a normal glucose uptake pattern.
Scientists studied the plant's uptake of nitrogen from the soil.
The medication's uptake into the bloodstream happens within minutes.
Eshe's test results indicated that her iron uptake was lower than expected.
- absorption
more general term; 'absorption' covers liquids and gases being soaked up, while 'uptake' more often implies active transport into a biological system
- intake
focuses on the amount taken in through an opening (e.g., mouth, nose), not necessarily on what happens to it afterward
- consumption
emphasises using up a resource; 'uptake' can describe merely entering a system without being consumed
文法句型
uptake of [substance]
[substance] uptake
uptake into [body/system]
用法筆記
Frequently appears in scientific and medical contexts where the substance being absorbed is named before or after 'uptake' (e.g., oxygen uptake, uptake of calcium). Often measured or quantified.
常見錯誤
2. the rate or degree to which people begin to use or accept a new product, service
the rate or degree to which people begin to use or accept a new product, service, technology, idea, or opportunity
The uptake of electric cars has grown quickly across Europe this year.
collocation: uptake of [product/technology]
Vaccine uptake among young adults in Taipei reached over eighty percent.
collocation: vaccine uptake
Yara's company hoped for a high uptake of its new payment system.
Despite the campaign, the uptake of solar panels in rural areas stayed low.
Luca's team surveyed local businesses to measure the uptake of digital tools.
- adoption
more active — implies a deliberate choice to start using something; 'uptake' can be more passive or measured
- acceptance
emphasises the willingness to receive something; 'uptake' implies actual use, not just willingness
- take-up
British English variant with identical meaning; slightly less formal
- rejection
the decision not to use or accept something
- resistance
active opposition to adoption, often implying social or systemic barriers
文法句型
uptake of [product/technology/service]
[something] uptake
high/low uptake
用法筆記
Commonly used in business, public-health, and technology contexts with collective subjects (populations, markets, age groups). The rate is typically described as high, low, fast, slow, or widespread. Often paired with a quantifier (e.g., 'fifty percent uptake').