To pass food, drink, etc. To take in; absorb; engulf; envelop. To take back words said ; retract; withdraw. To put up with; tolerate; bear humbly.
To refrain from expressing; hold back; suppress. To utter words indistinctly. To move the muscles of the throat as in swallowing something; specif. The amount swallowed at one time. The throat or gullet. The space between the wheel and the frame of a pulley block, through which a line passes.
To cause something such as food or drink to pass through the mouth and throat into the stomach. An amount that is swallowed. To cause food, drink etc. To take something in so that it disappears; to consume , absorb. My throat was so sore that I was unable to swallow. To accept easily or without questions; to believe , accept. To engross; to appropriate; usually with up. To retract; to recant. To put up with; to bear patiently or without retaliation.
The amount swallowed in one gulp ; the act of swallowing. He took the aspirin with a single swallow of water. Kids Definition of swallow Entry 2 of 3. Kids Definition of swallow Entry 3 of 3. Medical Definition of swallow Entry 1 of 2. Medical Definition of swallow Entry 2 of 2. Get Word of the Day daily email! Test Your Vocabulary. Test your vocabulary with our question quiz!
Love words? Need even more definitions? Homophones, Homographs, and Homonyms The same, but different. Merriam-Webster's Words of the Week - Nov. Ask the Editors 'Everyday' vs. What Is 'Semantic Bleaching'? How 'literally' can mean "figuratively". Literally How to use a word that literally drives some pe Words nearby swallow swakara , swale , Swaledale , SWALK , swallet , swallow , swallow dive , swallow hole , swallowing reflex , swallow one's pride , swallow one's words.
Compare bank swallow , barn swallow , martin. Words related to swallow absorb , devour , drink , eat , gobble , gulp , ingest , inhale , wash down , accept , buy , belt , bolt , dispatch , dispose , down , drop , imbibe , ingurgitate , quaff.
How to use swallow in a sentence This is a tedious process without a pot, but you can melt a few swallow s at a time in a piece of tinfoil, a can or bottle discarded by a sloppy hiker. Antonio Stradivari Horace William Petherick.
Also called: crown , throat nautical the opening between the shell and the groove of the sheave of a block, through which the rope is passed. Derived forms of swallow swallowable , adjective swallower , noun. See fairy swallow. Derived forms of swallow swallow-like , adjective. To pass something, as food or drink, through the mouth and throat into the stomach. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
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