v alsotighten up [T]to close or fasten something firmly by turning it
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loosen Tighten the screws firmly. I'd put the new tyre on, but I hadn't tightened up the wheel. [I and T]if you tighten a rope, wire etc, or if it tightens, it is stretched or pulled so that it becomes tight
When you tighten guitar strings, the note gets higher. The rope tightened around his body. [I and T]to become stiff or make a part of your body become stiff
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relax His mouth tightened into a thin, angry line. Tighten up the muscles of both arms.tighten your grip/hold on stha) to control a place or situation more strictly
Rebel forces have tightened their hold on the capital.b) to hold someone or something more firmly
Sarah tightened her grip on my arm. [T]to make a rule, law, or system more strict
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relax Efforts to tighten the rules have failed.tighten up on sth a range of measures to tighten up on illegal share dealingtighten your beltinformalto try to spend less money than you used to
Businesses were tightening their belts and cutting jobs.tighten the screws (on sb)informal to try to force someone to do something, by threatening them or making things difficult for them - used in news reports
Closing the border would tighten the screws on the terrorists. [I]American English if a race or competition tightens, the distance between the competitors becomes smaller
He expects the presidential race to tighten.tighten upphr vif a team or group tightens up, they start working together more effectively
tighten sth⇔up We have tightened up the defence and are winning matches as a result.