Decide
UK /["/dɪˈsaɪd/","/dɪˈsaɪdz/","/dɪˈsaɪdɪd/","/dɪˈsaɪdɪŋ/"]/US /["/dɪˈsaɪd/","/dɪˈsaɪdz/","/dɪˈsaɪdɪd/","/dɪˈsaɪdɪŋ/"]/
Definition
to think carefully about the different possibilities that are available and choose one of them
In simple words: To choose something after thinking about it.
Examples
- I need to decide what to eat for dinner.
- Can you decide between the red dress and the blue one?
- It's hard to decide when there are so many options.
- The committee will decide the winner of the contest next week.
- She has to decide if she wants to go to the party or stay home.
Usage notes
Use 'decide' in everyday conversation when you're talking about choices. It's neutral, so it's suitable for any context, but not ideal for very formal writing.
Grammar pattern
decide + object
Memory hint
Think of 'decide' as 'de-cide' — you're cutting through options to make a choice.
Collocations
- eventually
- finally
- ultimately
- be able to
- be unable to
- cannot
- against
- between
- in favour/favor of
- decide for yourself
- the task of deciding something
- to be decided
- eventually
- finally
- ultimately
- be able to
- be unable to
- cannot
- against
- between
- in favour/favor of
- decide for yourself
- the task of deciding something
- to be decided
Synonyms
- choose
- determine
- settle
- resolve
- conclude
Antonyms
- hesitate
- waver
- vacillate
Common mistakes
- Using 'decide' without an object (e.g., 'I decide.' should be 'I decide to go.').
- Confusing 'decide' with 'deciding' when discussing ongoing choices.
- Saying 'decide for' instead of 'decide on' for choices.