WordLens

touch on

1 of 1verb
/ˈtʌʧ ɑn/
Forms:touches on,touching on,touched on,touched on
1

to briefly mention a subject in written or spoken discussion

transitive
  • The professor touched on several interesting historical events during the lecture.
  • The article touched on various aspects of the environmental impact.
  • The news report touched on the recent developments in technology.
  • The speaker briefly touched on the challenges faced by the team.
2

to have an impact on a topic or situation

transitive
  • Economic fluctuations can touch on various sectors of the market.
  • The news about layoffs will touch on employee morale.
  • The pandemic has touched on global economic stability.
  • The budget cuts will touch on every department in the organization.
3

to get very close to something or almost be a part of it

transitive
  • The proposed solution touches on addressing the issue, but a more comprehensive approach is needed.
  • The new policy touches on fairness, but some aspects still need further consideration.
  • His explanation almost touched on the truth but fell short of revealing the complete story.
4

to repair something that is torn or broken by replacing or reassembling a part

transitive
  • The technician was skilled at touching on torn cables in electronic devices.
  • The artist carefully touched on the broken sculpture with glue.
  • The repairman needed to touch on the torn canvas before the art exhibit.
Antonyms: