beat about
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Verb (intransitive):
- To search anxiously or thoroughly: To look for something in a restless, concerned, or very diligent manner, often implying a lack of a clear starting point or method.
Usage and Examples
- Verb:
- She began to beat about in her bag for the missing keys. (She started searching anxiously in her bag for the missing keys.)
- The detective beat about for clues at the scene of the crime. (The detective searched thoroughly and anxiously for clues at the scene of the crime.)
- We beat about in the attic, hoping to find the old photo album. (We searched anxiously in the attic, hoping to find the old photo album.)
Advanced Usage
- "To beat about for [something]": This is the most common construction, specifying the object of the anxious search.
- He was beating about for a reasonable excuse. (He was searching anxiously for a reasonable excuse.)
Variants and Related Words
- Beat around the bush (idiom): To avoid talking about something directly. (Note: This is a different idiom and not a variant of "beat about" in the sense of searching.)
- Search (verb): To look for something carefully.
- Rummage (verb): To search for something by moving things around in a hurried or careless way.
Synonyms
- Search frantically: To search in a wild, panicked way.
- Scrabble: To search quickly and desperately with the hands.
- Fumble: To use the hands awkwardly while trying to find or hold something.
Related Phrasal Verbs
- Beat about does not commonly form other phrasal verbs with different particles while retaining this specific meaning of anxious searching.
Related Idioms
- None directly related to the "anxious search" meaning of "beat about." (The idiom "beat about the bush" is related in form but has a completely different meaning concerning indirect speech.)