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definitions

follow (v.)

1.issue or terminate (in a specified way, state, etc.); end"result in tragedy"

2.keep informed"He kept up on his country's foreign policies"

3.behave in accordance or in agreement with"Follow a pattern" "Follow my example"

4.keep to"Stick to your principles" "stick to the diet"

5.grasp the meaning"Can you follow her argument?" "When he lectures, I cannot follow"

6.follow, discover, or ascertain the course of development of something"None" "trace the student's progress"

7.perform an accompaniment to"The orchestra could barely follow the frequent pitch changes of the soprano"

8.imitate in behavior; take as a model"Teenagers follow their friends in everything"

9.travel along a certain course"follow the road" "follow the trail"

10.to travel behind, go after, come after"The ducklings followed their mother around the pond" "Please follow the guide through the museum"

11.follow in or as if in pursuit"The police car pursued the suspected attacker" "Her bad deed followed her and haunted her dreams all her life"

12.keep under surveillance"The police had been following him for weeks but they could not prove his involvement in the bombing"

13.choose and follow; as of theories, ideas, policies, strategies or plans"She followed the feminist movement" "The candidate espouses Republican ideals"

14.be the successor (of)"Carter followed Ford" "Will Charles succeed to the throne?"

15.work in a specific place, with a specific subject, or in a specific function"He is a herpetologist" "She is our resident philosopher"

16.follow with the eyes or the mind"Keep an eye on the baby, please!" "The world is watching Sarajevo" "She followed the men with the binoculars"

17.act in accordance with someone's rules, commands, or wishes"He complied with my instructions" "You must comply or else!" "Follow these simple rules" "abide by the rules"

18.adhere to or practice"These people still follow the laws of their ancient religion"

19.accept and follow the leadership or command or guidance of"Let's follow our great helmsman!" "She followed a guru for years"

20.to be the product or result"Melons come from a vine" "Understanding comes from experience"

21.be later in time"Tuesday always follows Monday"

22.come as a logical consequence; follow logically"It follows that your assertion is false" "the theorem falls out nicely"

23.come after in time, as a result"A terrible tsunami followed the earthquake"

24.be next"Mary plays best, with John and Sue following"

25.to bring something about at a later time than"She followed dinner with a brandy" "He followed his lecture with a question and answer period"

following (adj.)

1.about to be mentioned or specified"the following items"

2.immediately following in time or order"the following day" "next in line" "the next president" "the next item on the list"

3.going or proceeding or coming after in the same direction"the crowd of following cars made the occasion seem like a parade" "tried to outrun the following footsteps"

4.in the desired direction"a following wind"

following (n.)

1.the act of pursuing in an effort to overtake or capture"the culprit started to run and the cop took off in pursuit"

2.a group of followers or enthusiasts

 
see also

following (n.)

pursue

 
synonyms

following (n.)

chase, followers, pursuit

 
phrases

-follow a course of treatment • follow a cure • follow each other • follow in s.o.'s footsteps • follow in the wake of • follow lectures • follow on • follow out • follow s.o.'s example • follow suit • follow through • follow up • follow up on • follow upon • follow with one's eyes • follow-on • follow-through • follow-up • follow-up care • follow-up course • follow-up inspection

-following wind • the following day

-Follow-Up Studies

-And the Rest Will Follow • Baby, Let Me Follow You Down • Barium follow-through • Fall, I Will Follow • Figure-of-eight follow through • Follow Blind • Follow Follow • Follow For Now • Follow Me • Follow Me (Antique single) • Follow Me (Do single) • Follow Me (Uncle Kracker song) • Follow Me (album) • Follow Me (disambiguation) • Follow Me (song) • Follow Me Around • Follow Me Home • Follow Me Quietly • Follow Me into Madness • Follow Me up to Carlow • Follow Me, Boys! • Follow Me/I Won't Play the Fool • Follow My Heart • Follow That Camel • Follow That Girl • Follow That Woman • Follow The City Lights • Follow The Flock, Step In Shit • Follow Through • Follow You, Follow Me • Follow Your Footsteps • Follow Your Heart • Follow Your Heart (Mario Frangoulis album) • Follow Your Nose • Follow focus • Follow for Now (album) • Follow me! • Follow shot • Follow that Dream • Follow that Egg! • Follow the Blind • Follow the Boys • Follow the Cops Back Home • Follow the Drinkin' Gourd • Follow the Fleet • Follow the Girls • Follow the Leader • Follow the Leader (Eric B. and Rakim album) • Follow the Leader (Korn album) • Follow the Leader (album) • Follow the Leader (game) • Follow the Reaper • Follow the Saint • Follow the Sun • Follow through (cricket) • Follow-On Offering • Follow-Up and Arrangement Committee • Follow-me • Follow-on • Follow-the-leader • Free Your Mind...And Your Ass Will Follow • I Will Follow • I Will Follow Him • I Will Follow You into the Dark • I'll Follow the Sun • Just Follow Law • Lead and follow • Let Me Follow • My Old Man (Said Follow the Van) • Project Follow Through • Rupert Bear, Follow the Magic... • Sesame Street presents Follow That Bird • Small bowel follow-through • The hot-blooded teacher-student bond ~The time a man must follow his Way of the Ninja~ • UHF Follow-On System • You'll Follow Me Down • Zayed Center for Coordination and Follow-Up

-Church of God with Signs Following • Closings and cancellations following the September 11, 2001 attacks • Cult following • Detentions following the September 11, 2001 attacks • Financial assistance following the September 11, 2001 attacks • Following sea • Following the Equator • Following the Sun • I'm Not Following You • List of 'songs with questionable lyrics' following the September 11, 2001 attacks • Load following power plant • Now I'm Following You • Score following • Terrain-following radar • The Night of the Following Day • Trend following

 
analogic tree

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v.)

follow (v. tr.)

follow (v. tr.)

tid

obey[Classe]

follow (v. tr.)

following (adj.)

following (adj.)

following (n.)

tid

chase;pursuit[ClasseHyper.]

pursue[Nominalisation]

following (n.)

 
Merriam-Webster (1913)

FollowFol"low (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Followed (?); p. pr. & vb. n. Following.][OE. foluwen, folwen, folgen, AS. folgian, fylgean, fylgan; akin to D. volgen, OHG. folgēn, G. folgen, Icel. fylgja, Sw. följa, Dan. fölge, and perh. to E. folk.]
1. To go or come after; to move behind in the same path or direction; hence, to go with (a leader, guide, etc.); to accompany; to attend.

It waves me forth again; I'll follow it. Shak.

2. To endeavor to overtake; to go in pursuit of; to chase; to pursue; to prosecute.

I will harden the hearts of the Egyptians, and they shall follow them. Ex. xiv. 17.

3. To accept as authority; to adopt the opinions of; to obey; to yield to; to take as a rule of action; as, to follow good advice.

Approve the best, and follow what I approve. Milton.

Follow peace with all men. Heb. xii. 14.

It is most agreeable to some men to follow their reason; and to others to follow their appetites. J. Edwards.

4. To copy after; to take as an example.

We had rather follow the perfections of them whom we like not, than in defects resemble them whom we love. Hooker.

5. To succeed in order of time, rank, or office.

6. To result from, as an effect from a cause, or an inference from a premise.

7. To watch, as a receding object; to keep the eyes fixed upon while in motion; to keep the mind upon while in progress, as a speech, musical performance, etc.; also, to keep up with; to understand the meaning, connection, or force of, as of a course of thought or argument.

He followed with his eyes the flitting shade. Dryden.

8. To walk in, as a road or course; to attend upon closely, as a profession or calling.

O, had I but followed the arts! Shak.

O Antony! I have followed thee to this. Shak.

Follow board (Founding), a board on which the pattern and the flask lie while the sand is rammed into the flask. Knight. -- To follow the hounds, to hunt with dogs. -- To follow suit (Card Playing), to play a card of the same suit as the leading card; hence, colloquially, to follow an example set. -- To follow up, to pursue indefatigably.

Syn.- To pursue; chase; go after; attend; accompany; succeed; imitate; copy; embrace; maintain. - To Follow, Pursue. To follow (v.t.) denotes simply to go after; to pursue denotes to follow with earnestness, and with a view to attain some definite object; as, a hound pursues the deer. So a person follows a companion whom he wishes to overtake on a journey; the officers of justice pursue a felon who has escaped from prison.

FollowFol"low, v. i. To go or come after; -- used in the various senses of the transitive verb: To pursue; to attend; to accompany; to be a result; to imitate.

Syn. -- To Follow, Succeed, Ensue. To follow (v.i.) means simply to come after; as, a crowd followed. To succeed means to come after in some regular series or succession; as, day succeeds to day, and night to night. To ensue means to follow by some established connection or principle of sequence. As wave follows wave, revolution succeeds to revolution; and nothing ensues but accumulated wretchedness.

FollowFol"low (?), n. The art or process of following; specif., in some games, as billiards, a stroke causing a ball to follow another ball after hitting it. Also used adjectively; as, follow shot.

FollowingFol"low*ing (?), n.
1. One's followers, adherents, or dependents, collectively. Macaulay.

2. Vocation; business; profession.

FollowingFol"low*ing, a.
1. Next after; succeeding; ensuing; as, the assembly was held on the following day.

2. (Astron.) (In the field of a telescope) In the direction from which stars are apparently moving (in consequence of the earth's rotation); as, a small star, north following or south following. In the direction toward which stars appear to move is called preceding.

☞ The four principal directions in the field of a telescope are north, south, following, preceding.

 
Wikipedia

Following

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

You have new messages (last change).
This article is about the film. For information on groups and leadership, see followership.


Following
Directed by Christopher Nolan
Produced by Emma Thomas
Jeremy Theobald
Peter Broderick
Written by Christopher Nolan
Starring Jeremy Theobald
Alex Haw
Lucy Russell
John Nolan
Music by David Julyan
Cinematography Christopher Nolan
Distributed by Zeitgeist Films
Release date(s) April 3, 1999
Running time 70 min.
Language English
Budget $6,000
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Following is a 1998 crime film directed by Christopher Nolan about a young man who follows people he sees on the streets and is drawn into a world of crime. The story is told in a non-linear style, a technique that Nolan uses in his next movie, Memento and 2006's The Prestige. The soundtrack was composed by Nolan's frequent collaborator David Julyan,

Tagline: You're Never Alone.

Plot

Bill is a young, jobless aspiring writer. He tells a story about himself to a man, explaining how he began to follow random people on the street in an attempt to understand them. He sets up a number of rules to separate himself from the people he follows, but breaks them when he begins following a specific man, Cobb, day after day. Cobb wears a suit and leaves several different apartment buildings carrying a bag. He eventually confronts Bill at a diner and reveals that he is a burglar. Cobb invites Bill to accompany him on his next burglary.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Cobb takes Bill to an apartment and explains to Bill that there is usually a key somewhere on the doorstep. Bill finds the key and they go inside. Cobb first finds a bag and then begins going through the apartment. He explains that you can learn a great deal about people from their possessions and deduces that the apartment belongs to a young couple. Cobb shows Bill that everyone has a box in which they keep their most personal possessions. He then explains that his true passion is jolting people through his robberies so that they reexamine their lives. His motto is "You take it away to show them what they had." He even tries to frame the man of the apartment for an affair, applying his philosophy to destroying relationships as well. A couple arrives at the apartment before the burglars leave. Cobb passes himself off as a prospective renter and the two quickly leave.

Bill is thrilled by the experience, but worries that the couple has seen their faces. Cobb determines that the woman was having an affair with the man they saw, and so will not report the incident to the police. Cobb suggests that Bill find the next apartment to rob. Bill selects his own apartment. Cobb uses the key under the doormat to enter and deduces that the owner of the apartment is an educated, unemployed loser who wants to impress people. Bill is silently hurt by Cobb's analysis.

Bill begins following an attractive blonde woman who frequents a local bar. He tries to pick her up but she rebuffs him, telling him that she is involved with the bald-headed gangster who owns the bar. Bill chooses her apartment to break into next. Cobb takes a pair of her panties and her box of sentimental possessions, then misplaces one of her earrings. Afterwards, Cobb takes Bill to the run-down apartment where he is squatting. He suggests that Bill take the loot and fence it himself, then offers to buy him dinner. At the restaurant, Bill spots the woman who discovered them burglarizing her apartment. He panics, and Cobb suggests that he change his appearance to look more respectable.

Bill cuts his hair and begins wearing a suit. He pores over the Blonde's possessions and eventually tries her again, this time with more success. She confides in him about how she fears the bald-headed gangster. She tells a story about how he brought a man who owed him money to her apartment. He smashed the man's hand with a hammer and then crushed his skull, leaving blood all over her rug. She eventually tells Bill that the gangster is blackmailing her with an envelope of photographs he keeps in a safe along with his money. He promises to break into the safe and return the envelopes unopened. He brings the plan to Cobb, but Cobb refuses and the two men fight.

Bill later calls Cobb to say that he is doing the job alone, and asks what protection he should bring. Cobb suggests a hammer. Bill breaks into the bar and opens the safe using the combination the Blonde has given him. The safe contains an envelope and stacks of cash. He cannot find a bag, so he begins taping cash to his body. A man stumbles upon him and Bill hits him on the head with his hammer. He gets home with the loot and opens the envelope, but discovers only ordinary modeling photographs of the Blonde.

He confronts the Blonde with her deception and she tells him that she and Cobb have set him up. Cobb had recently broken into the apartment of a murdered old woman, and was charged for the crime. Having known that Bill was following him for some time, Cobb decided to manipulate Bill into mimicking his appearance and habits to create a decoy for the jury. The Blonde is a friend of Cobb's and helped him with the plan. Bill resolves to turn himself in and tell the whole story, but the Blonde is unconcerned. She returns to Cobb and tells him of her success. Cobb reveals that he actually works for the bald-headed gangster, whom the Blonde has been blackmailing with her blood-soaked rug. He initiates the final part of his plan and kills her.

Bill finishes his story, but the man, who is a detective, tells Bill that there is no ongoing investigation of the murder of an old woman. Rather, a great amount of evidence links Bill to the murder of the Blonde, who was recently killed with his hammer. Meanwhile, Cobb wanders into a crowd and disappears.

Spoilers end here.

Background

Following was made on an extremely low budget. The principal actors had full-time jobs and were only able to shoot on Saturdays. Because the budget permitted only one or two takes, six months of rehearsal were done before shooting began. Following was shown at the Hong Kong Film Festival, and the screening helped Nolan find investors for his next film, Memento.

External links

  • Following at the Internet Movie Database


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org../../../f/o/l/Following.html"

This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer) . Donate to wikipedia.

Licence : Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.

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