dwell
verb /dwel/
  /dwel/
[intransitive] (formal or literary)Verb Forms
 Phrasal Verbs| present simple I / you / we / they dwell |  /dwel/  /dwel/ | 
| he / she / it dwells |  /dwelz/  /dwelz/ | 
| past simple dwelt |  /dwelt/  /dwelt/ | 
| past participle dwelt |  /dwelt/  /dwelt/ | 
| past simple dwelled |  /dweld/  /dweld/ | 
| past participle dwelled |  /dweld/  /dweld/ | 
| -ing form dwelling |  /ˈdwelɪŋ/  /ˈdwelɪŋ/ | 
- + adv./prep. to live somewhere- He dwelt in a ruined cottage on the hillside.
- For ten years she dwelled among the nomads of North America.
- The gorillas dwell in the high rainforests of Rwanda.
 Word OriginOld English dwellan ‘lead astray, hinder, delay’ (in Middle English ‘tarry, remain in a place’), of Germanic origin; related to Middle Dutch dwellen ‘stun, perplex’ and Old Norse dvelja ‘delay, tarry, stay’.