释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024feed /fid/USA pronunciation v., fed/fɛd/USA pronunciation feed•ing, n. v. - to give food to;
supply with nourishment:[~ + object]She liked to feed pigeons. - to provide as food: [ ~ + obj + to + obj]:to feed breadcrumbs to pigeons.[ ~ + obj + obj]:to feed the pigeons some breadcrumbs.
- Animal Husbandry (esp. of animals) to take food;
eat:[no object]The cows were feeding. - to be nourished;
live by eating:[~ + on + object]Those bats feed on fruit. - to yield or serve as food for:[~ + object]This land has fed ten generations.
n. - Animal Husbandry food, esp. for farm animals:[uncountable]grain feed.
- [countable] a meal, esp. a lavish one.
- a feeding mechanism:[countable]a printer tractor feed.
feed•er, n. [countable] WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024feed (fēd),USA pronunciation v., fed, feed•ing, n. v.t. - to give food to;
supply with nourishment:to feed a child. - to yield or serve as food for:This land has fed 10 generations.
- to provide as food.
- to furnish for consumption.
- to satisfy;
minister to; gratify:Poetry feeds the imagination. - to supply for maintenance or operation, as to a machine:to feed paper into a photocopier.
- to provide with the necessary materials for development, maintenance, or operation:to feed a printing press with paper.
- to use (land) as pasture.
- [Theat. Informal.]
- to supply (an actor, esp. a comedian) with lines or action, the responses to which are expected to elicit laughter.
- to provide cues to (an actor).
- [Chiefly Brit.]to prompt:Stand in the wings and feed them their lines.
- Radio and Televisionto distribute (a local broadcast) via satellite or network.
v.i. - (esp. of animals) to take food;
eat:cows feeding in a meadow; to feed well. - to be nourished or gratified;
subsist:to feed on grass; to feed on thoughts of revenge. - chain feed, to pass (work) successively into a machine in such a manner that each new piece is held in place by or connected to the one before.
n. - food, esp. for farm animals, as cattle, horses or chickens.
- an allowance, portion, or supply of such food.
- [Informal.]a meal, esp. a lavish one.
- the act of feeding.
- the act or process of feeding a furnace, machine, etc.
- the material, or the amount of it, so fed or supplied.
- a feeding mechanism.
- [Elect.]feeder (def. 10).
- [Theat. Informal.]
- a line spoken by one actor, the response to which by another actor is expected to cause laughter.
- an actor, esp. a straight man, who provides such lines.
- Radio and Televisiona local television broadcast distributed by satellite or network to a much wider audience, esp. nationwide or international.
- off one's feed, [Slang.]
- reluctant to eat;
without appetite. - dejected;
sad. - not well;
ill.
- bef. 950; Middle English feden, Old English fēdan; cognate with Gothic fodjan, Old Saxon fōdian. See food
feed′a•ble, adj. - 1, 2.See corresponding entry in Unabridged nourish, sustain.
- 5.See corresponding entry in Unabridged nurture, support, encourage, bolster.
- 14.See corresponding entry in Unabridged Feed, fodder, forage, provender mean food for animals. Feed is the general word:pig feed; chicken feed.Fodder is esp. applied to dry or green feed, as opposed to pasturage, fed to horses, cattle, etc.:fodder for winter feeding; Cornstalks are good fodder.Forage is food that an animal obtains (usually grass, leaves, etc.) by searching about for it:Lost cattle can usually live on forage.Provender denotes dry feed, such as hay, oats, or corn:a supply of provender in the haymow and corn cribs.
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