To grab onto something is to hold some nearby, substantial object with your hand, which is usually done in order to prevent yourself from falling over. If you are in a vehicle such as a bus, which is making rapid turns, starts or stops, you may need to hold on to something. Grab is the more informal version. It is an altered form of grasp.
I don't know if you want me to answer what that "something" is called, because it could be anything, but the action can be called: squeeze clutch grip clasp seize grab grasp
To cling is to grasp tightly.
To assist in our ability to grasp and hold onto objects
too download something onto a device!
No, "grasp" is not an interjection. It is a verb that means to understand or comprehend something.
It means that something is hard to understand or to "grasp".
To grab onto something is to hold some nearby, substantial object with your hand, which is usually done in order to prevent yourself from falling over. If you are in a vehicle such as a bus, which is making rapid turns, starts or stops, you may need to hold on to something. Grab is the more informal version. It is an altered form of grasp.
Grasp, clutch, grab.
I don't know if you want me to answer what that "something" is called, because it could be anything, but the action can be called: squeeze clutch grip clasp seize grab grasp
I don't know if you want me to answer what that "something" is called, because it could be anything, but the action can be called: squeeze clutch grip clasp seize grab grasp
Grasp, hold on to, grab, hold
To cling is to grasp tightly.
Grasp, clutch
Seized means to take hold of something forcibly or to capture something. It can also refer to the act of confiscating or taking possession of something legally.
hold
To assist in our ability to grasp and hold onto objects