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  1. 1. a. : the act or an instance of following up. b. : something that follows up. 2. : maintenance of contact with or reexamination of a person (such as a patient) especially following treatment. The surgeon scheduled a follow-up with his patient a week after the surgery. 3. : a news story presenting new information on a story published earlier.

  2. follow-up. noun [ C or U ] uk / ˈfɒl.əʊ.ʌp / us / ˈfɑː.loʊ.ʌp / a further action connected with something that happened before, especially to find out if anything has happened or changed since the previous event: follow-up to This meeting is a follow-up to the one we had last month.

  3. Dec 23, 2020 · As an adjective, follow-up means intended as a response, a reaction, an evaluation, or a reinforcement of a previous action. For instance, you may be called for a follow-up interview if you did well on your first-round interview, or you may receive a follow-up letter if you write a letter of complaint to a company.

  4. In this article, I will compare follow up vs follow-up. I will use each of these variants in an example sentence, so you can see them in context. I will also show you a helpful mnemonic that you can use to remember whether you need follow up or follow-up.

  5. something that is done to continue or complete something that was done before: a follow-up meeting. (Definition of follow-up from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Translations of follow-up. in Spanish. seguimiento, continuar, proseguir… See more. in Portuguese. acompanhamento, complemento, dar seguimento… See more.

  6. follow-up. Word forms: plural follow-ups. variable noun [oft NOUN noun] A follow-up is something that is done to continue or add to something done previously. They are recording a follow-up to their successful first album. One man was arrested during the raid and another during a follow-up operation.

  7. noun. the act of following up. an action or thing that serves to increase the effectiveness of a previous one, as a second or subsequent letter, phone call, or visit. Also called follow. Journalism. a news story providing additional information on a story or article previously published.

  8. pursue to a conclusion or bring to a successful issue. “She followed up his recommendations with a written proposal”. synonyms: carry out, follow out, follow through, go through, implement, put through. accomplish, action, carry out, carry through, execute, fulfil, fulfill. put in effect. see more. see less. types:

  9. follow-up. noun. [countable, uncountable] an action or a thing that continues something that has already started or comes after something similar that was done earlier The book is a follow-up to her excellent television series. Despite the success of his last album, there are as yet no plans for any follow-ups.

  10. Definition of follow up phrasal verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

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