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track
[track]
See: COVER ONE'S TRACKS, IN ONE'S TRACKS, INSIDE TRACK, JUMP THE TRACK, KEEP TRACK, LOSE TRACK, MAKE TRACKS, OFF THE BEATEN TRACK, ON THE TRACK OF, THE TRACKS.
Source: A Dictionary of American Idioms
by A. Makkai, M.T. Boatner, J.E. Gates
© 2010
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keep track
[keep track] {v. phr.} To know about changes; stay informed or up-to-date; keep a count ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
lose track
[lose track] {v. phr.} To forget about something; not stay informed; fail to keep a ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
inside track
[inside track] {n. phr.} 1. The inside, shortest distance around a curved racetrack; the place ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
jump the track
[jump the track] {v. phr.} 1. To go off rails; go or run the wrong ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
throw off the track
[throw off the track] {v. phr.} To divert; mislead; confuse. * /The clever criminals threw ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
off the beaten track
[off the beaten track] {adv. phr.} Not well known or often used; not gone to ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
track down
[track down] {v.} To find by or as if by following tracks or a trail. ...
A Dictionary of American Idioms
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