dig out
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Verb (transitive):
- To create or form by digging: To excavate or hollow out a space, channel, or hole from the ground or another material.
- To remove by digging: To extract, unearth, or free something from where it is buried or covered, such as from earth, snow, or debris.
Usage
The verb "dig out" is used with a direct object. It describes the physical action of using tools or one's hands to remove material in order to create something or to uncover and retrieve something that is buried. - It often implies significant effort or the clearing of a substantial amount of material. - The object can be the thing being created (e.g., a hole) or the thing being retrieved (e.g., a car).
Examples
Creating by digging:
- The engineers had to dig out a new foundation for the building.
- We dug out a channel to divert the water away from the house.
Removing by digging:
- After the avalanche, it took hours to dig out the buried car.
- They are trying to dig out the ancient artifacts from the site.
- I need to dig out my winter boots from the back of the closet. (Figurative extension: retrieving from a packed or cluttered space.)
Advanced Usage
- "Dig oneself out": To extricate oneself from a difficult situation, often used metaphorically.
- After the financial crisis, the company spent years trying to dig itself out of debt.
- "Dig out from under": To manage a large backlog of work or obligations.
- I'm finally digging out from under all the emails I missed during my vacation.
Variants and Related Words
- Dig (verb): The base form, meaning to break up and move earth.
- Excavate (verb): A more formal synonym, often used in archaeological or construction contexts.
- Unearth (verb): To find something buried in the ground, often by digging; also used for discovering hidden information.
Synonyms
- Excavate
- Unearth
- Extricate (for the "removing" sense)
- Retrieve (for the "removing" sense)
Related Phrasal Verbs
- Dig up: Very similar to "dig out" in the "remove by digging" sense. It can also mean to discover information.
- They dug up the old tree stump.
- The journalist dug up some scandalous facts.
- Dig into: To begin eating heartily; or to investigate or delve into something.
- He dug into his meal.
- We need to dig into the company's financial records.
Related Idioms
- Dig deep: To make a great effort, especially to find resources (money, energy, courage).
- We'll have to dig deep to meet our fundraising goal.
- Dig one's own grave: To do something that causes one's own failure or ruin.
- By lying to the boss, he's just digging his own grave.
Verb
- create by digging
- dig a hole
- dig out a channel
- dig out from underneath earth or snow
- remove, harvest, or recover by digging
- dig salt
- dig coal