issue with イディオム
take issue with|issue|take
v. phr. To be openly against; speak against; disagree with.
He thought his boss was wrong but was afraid to take issue with him on the matter.
take issue with
take issue with Disagree with, as in
I take issue with those figures; they don't include last month's sales. This idiom comes from legal terminology, where it was originally put as to
join issue, meaning “take the opposite side of a case.” [Late 1600s]
issue with (something)
To allocate, assign, or administer article clearly to one (who can be called amid "issue" and "with"). A: "Are you abiding the hospital issued you guys with a bearing affidavit back I was born?" B: "Uh, yes, they absolutely did. It's got to be about actuality somewhere." Everyone has been issued with the uniforms they will charge for the job.Learn more: issueissue someone with something
to accommodate addition with something; to administer article to someone. We issued them with the clothes they bare for the trip. Everyone was issued with supplies.Learn more: issue
Dictionary