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eat into

/eet/US // it //UK // (iːt) //

吃进,吃到,侵蚀,吃到了

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    ate [eyt; especially British et] /eɪt; especially British ɛt/ or eat [et, eet]; /ɛt, it/; eat·en or eat [et, eet]; /ɛt, it/; eat·ing.

    • : to take into the mouth and swallow for nourishment; chew and swallow.
    • : to consume by or as if by devouring gradually; wear away; corrode: The patient was eaten by disease and pain.
    • : to make, as by gnawing or corrosion.
    • : to ravage or devastate: a forest eaten by fire.
    • : to use up, especially wastefully; consume: Unexpected expenses have been eating up their savings.
    • : to absorb or pay for: The builder had to eat the cost of the repairs.
    • : Slang: Vulgar. to perform cunnilingus or fellatio on.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    ate [eyt; especially British et] /eɪt; especially British ɛt/ or eat [et, eet]; /ɛt, it/; eat·en or eat [et, eet]; /ɛt, it/; eat·ing.

    • : to consume food; take a meal: We'll eat at six o'clock.
    • : to make a way, as by gnawing or corrosion: Acid ate through the linoleum.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : eats, Informal. food.
  1. 1
    • : eat away / into to destroy gradually, as by erosion: For eons, the pounding waves ate away at the shoreline.
    • : eat out, to have a meal at a restaurant rather than at home.
    • : eat up, to consume wholly.to show enthusiasm for; take pleasure in: The audience ate up everything he said.to believe without question.

Phrases

  • eat and run
  • eat away at
  • eat crow
  • eat high off the hog
  • eat in
  • eat like a bird
  • eat one's cake and have it, too
  • eat one's hat
  • eat one's heart out
  • eat one's words
  • eat out
  • eat out of someone's hand
  • eat shit
  • eat someone alive
  • eat someone out
  • eat someone out of house and home
  • eat someone's ass out
  • eat someone's lunch
  • eat someone up
  • eat up
  • dog eat dog
  • proof of the pudding is in the eating
  • what's eating you

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • It’s nestled between a handful of other quick eats, bars and restaurants.

  • On longer trips, trying out regional snacks and unexpected roadside eats are an essential part of the experience.

  • Two Indonesian airlines, Garuda and Lion Air, have seen Fernandes eat their lunch and are only now responding.

  • Still, I wish that DuVernay had given us more about those who are less famous besides a scene where they all eat dinner together.

  • Tribole tells her patients not to change what they eat but how.

  • Now, his new book “The Bulletproof Diet,” claims to offer a weight loss solution that lets you have your butter, and eat it too.

  • I try to eat less processed food, like whole grains, fruits and vegetables, nothing over-processed.

  • You see Squinty, like most little pigs, thought more of something to eat than of anything else.

  • Jean clung to his English nurse, who played the fascinating game of pretending to eat his hand.

  • I mean it is well my mother is ill, and doesn't wish to eat, for there would be nothing for her, if she did.

  • Many of his bird neighbors,p. 31 for instance, liked the same things to eat that he did.

  • That was because he was hungry, you see, but pigs nearly always eat fast, as though they were continually in a hurry.