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 dug [dʌg]   添加此单词到默认生词本
dig的过去式和过去分词

  1. He dug in his spurs.
    他用靴刺踢马。
  2. Lord knows where he dug up that dreadful story.
    天知道他那讨厌的故事是从哪里找来的。
  3. An old Greek statue was dug up here last month.
    上个月在这儿挖出了一尊古希腊雕像


dug
[ noun ]
an udder or breast or teat
<noun.animal>


Dig \Dig\ (d[i^]g), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Dug} (d[u^]g) or
{Digged} (d[i^]gd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Digging}. -- Digged is
archaic.] [OE. diggen, perh. the same word as diken, dichen
(see {Dike}, {Ditch}); cf. Dan. dige to dig, dige a ditch; or
(?) akin to E. 1st dag. [root]67.]
1. To turn up, or delve in, (earth) with a spade or a hoe; to
open, loosen, or break up (the soil) with a spade, or
other sharp instrument; to pierce, open, or loosen, as if
with a spade.

Be first to dig the ground. --Dryden.

2. To get by digging; as, to dig potatoes, or gold.

3. To hollow out, as a well; to form, as a ditch, by removing
earth; to excavate; as, to dig a ditch or a well.

4. To thrust; to poke. [Colloq.]

You should have seen children . . . dig and push
their mothers under the sides, saying thus to them:
Look, mother, how great a lubber doth yet wear
pearls. --Robynson
(More's
Utopia).

5. To like; enjoy; admire. The whole class digs Pearl Jam.
[Colloq.]
[PJC]

{To dig down}, to undermine and cause to fall by digging; as,
to dig down a wall.

{To dig from}, {To dig out of}, {To dig out}, {To dig up}, to
get out or obtain by digging; as, to dig coal from or out
of a mine; to dig out fossils; to dig up a tree. The
preposition is often omitted; as, the men are digging
coal, digging iron ore, digging potatoes.

{To dig in},
(a) to cover by digging; as, to dig in manure.
(b) To entrench oneself so as to give stronger resistance;
-- used of warfare or negotiating situations.

{to dig in one's heels} To offer stubborn resistance.
[1913 Webster +PJC]


Dug \Dug\ (d[u^]g), n. [Akin to Sw. d["a]gga to suckle (a
child), Dan. d[ae]gge, and prob. to Goth. daddjan. [root]66.]
A teat, pap, or nipple; -- formerly that of a human mother,
now that of a cow or other beast.

With mother's dug between its lips. --Shak.


Dug \Dug\,
imp. & p. p. of {Dig}.

  1. These are a quick way of providing companies with telephones because they use radio links and so no roads need to be dug up. Once fixed networks are in place, the cellular ones will be used for mobile communications.
  2. "We've dug up all kinds of animal bones, but we haven't found anything human," said acting Carbon County sheriff Jim Robertson, who is searching for Ms. Curtis' remains.
  3. It still isn't completely clear how Credit Lyonnais dug itself such a deep hole.
  4. Her body was dug up Jan. 25 during a police search of the house.
  5. Strong aftershocks sent panicked residents rushing into the streets of northern Iran on Saturday, and mass graves were dug for victims of an earthquake that some official reports say killed at least 40,000 people.
  6. From the Adams Natural Beverage Co. to Zale Corp., these two irreverent business bashers dug for the dirt and found it.
  7. A second column of Israeli tanks and infantry backed up by helicopter gunships fought a short but fierce gunbattle with Hezbollah guerrillas dug into the abandoned village of Maydoun, 12 miles north of Israel's border.
  8. Workers dug a vertical rescue shaft using a huge truck-mounted pipeline excavator that uses a stream of compressed air to chisel away dirt and clay and then vacuums out the loose dirt.
  9. The Treasury dug in and said that 3 per cent was the maximum feasible. The emotion which that debate engendered was comparable with that which occurred later over 'shadowing' the D-Mark or joining the ERM.
  10. But the senior U.S. official noted that Moscow dug up its offer of a transitional government while Kabul's ruling communists had the upperhand in the civil war.
  11. "This is simply pure Sun Tzu." The younger Marines here in Rippertown have been training against models of Iraq's formidable, deeply dug desert defenses.
  12. They lead a multinational land, air and naval force that has dug in in the Saudi desert and is enforcing a U.N.-ordered embargo on trade with Iraq.
  13. The body of a recently buried 81-year-old man was dug up and impaled on an umbrella.
  14. For more than 20 years, according to testimony, the miners dug uranium ore without warnings from their employers or the government.
  15. The first plane, a P-38, went in on its wheels and flipped over when its landing gear dug in.
  16. Mr. Morales is disappointed that more figurines have not been dug up.
  17. Atop the rooster-comb ridge, a dozen Karen soldiers crouch behind rocks overlooking a saddle where the Burmese have dug in. Rifle bullets whine over the outpost where the soldiers have already spent 10 difficult days.
  18. After you've first dug in the roots, they bear year after year.
  19. Kessler said Britt's feet were found dug into the ground, as if to gain some warmth.
  20. "I feel real lucky just to be here talking," he said. "I guess I could have ended up in one of those holes I dug." Myers said boardinghouse tenants seldom exchanged more than a few words and assembled together only for meals twice a day.
  21. The most widely publicized was in Carpentras, France, where in May, a recently buried body was dug up and impaled on an umbrella pole.
  22. For two years, the Iraqis tried and failed to dislodge Iranians dug in around the marshlands ringing the battered oil terminal town of Faw.
  23. Police went through Berdella's house, finding more than 200 sexually explicit photographs, and dug up his back yard in an extensive search.
  24. It opens with Angelique arising from a sleep of 100 years when her grave in Mexico City is dug up.
  25. He said Iraqi forces are stacked behind each other in defensive lines and have dug extensive fortifications that include mine fields and barbed wire.
  26. He has good connections with the business community." Seattle-area residents enduring record cold dug out from a rare 10-inch snowfall, while another round of thunderstorms threatened the South with more flooding.
  27. "I still have the taste of death in my mouth," Underwood said. "I can't eat vegetables grown in the ground because they have dirt around them, like the people dug up in Puente's yard _ and I'm a vegetarian.
  28. Those dug out alive died in ambulances before reaching hospital," a police spokesman said.
  29. During that time the Argentines dug in, and were dislodged only after a 74-day war that claimed the lives of 712 Argentine and 258 British servicemen.
  30. Seven others, some clad in nightclothes, were splashed with kerosene and covered with dirt in a grave authorities believe was dug before the killings.
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