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  1. idiom. Add to word list. so involved in an activity that you do not notice other things: I was so caught up in my school work, that I didn't realize what was happening with my sister. caught up in something. To be caught up in something also means to be involved in an activity that you did not intend to be involved in:

  2. CATCH (SOMEONE) UP definition: 1. to reach someone in front of you by going faster than them: 2. to reach the same quality or…. Learn more.

  3. 1. : involved in (a difficult or confusing situation) Several members of Congress were caught up in the scandal. How did you get caught up in this mess? 2. : excited about something and having trouble thinking about anything else. Everyone was caught up in the excitement. Try not to get too caught up in the moment.

    • What Does Caught Up Mean?
    • Understanding Idioms
    • Summary

    Although caught up has a different meaning as a phrase (technically, it’s a phrasal verb, like the expression hang in there) than the word caught itself, it is helpful to think of the definition of caught to understand the expression. Caught is the past tense of the verb catch, meaning primarily “to capture or seize,” “to entangle in or get entangl...

    As has already been mentioned, caught up is an idiom. An idiom is an expression with an intended meaning that can’t fully be understood just by looking at the words that comprise it. As you’ve already discovered, these words and phrases have a figurative rather than literal meaning. Even if you’ve never heard the term idiom before now, you have mos...

    If you’re “caught up in” something, you’re either actively participating in it, even if you don’t want to be (with “it” usually being a complicated situation of some kind), or you’re so enthralled with and distracted by it that it’s all you can think about and focus on. When not followed by the preposition in, the phrase caught uphas other meanings...

    • Maggie Cramer
  4. 3 days ago · To catch up with someone means to reach the same standard, stage, or level that they have reached. Most late developers will catch up with their friends. [VERB PARTICLE + with] John began the season better than me but I have fought to catch up. [VERB PARTICLE]

  5. Synonyms for CAUGHT UP: trapped, tangled, immeshed, entoiled, enmeshed, entrapped, ensnared, involved; Antonyms of CAUGHT UP: detached, disengaged, disentangled, liberated, cleared, freed, extricated, untangled

  6. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English catch up phrasal verb 1 to improve and reach the same standard as other people in your class, group etc If you miss a lot of classes, it’s very difficult to catch up. with At the moment our technology is more advanced, but other countries are catching up with us. 2 to come from behind and reach som...