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feed
[feed]
verb (used with object)
to give food to; supply with nourishment.
to feed a child.
Antonyms: starveto yield or serve as food for.
This land has fed 10 generations.
Antonyms: starveto 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.
Theater Informal.
to supply (an actor, especially a comedian) with lines or action, the responses to which are expected to elicit laughter.
to provide cues to (an actor).
Chiefly British., to prompt.
Stand in the wings and feed them their lines.
Radio and Television., to distribute (a local broadcast) via satellite or network.
verb (used without object)
(especially 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.
noun
food, especially for farm animals, as cattle, horses or chickens.
an allowance, portion, or supply of such food.
Informal., a meal, especially 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.
Electricity., feeder.
Theater Informal.
a line spoken by one actor, the response to which by another actor is expected to cause laughter.
an actor, especially a straight man, who provides such lines.
a local television broadcast distributed by satellite or network to a much wider audience, especially nationwide or international.
Digital Technology.
a website or application that publishes updates from social media or news-collection websites in reverse chronological order.
I follow all of the latest celebrity gossip in my Twitter feed.
an XML-based web document that is updated automatically at predetermined intervals and includes descriptive titles or short descriptions and links to recent pages on a website.
Subscribe to news feeds to get the latest news from around the world.
feed
/ fiːd /
verb
to give food to
to feed the cat
to give as food
to feed meat to the cat
(intr) to eat food
the horses feed at noon
to provide food for
these supplies can feed 10 million people
to provide what is necessary for the existence or development of
to feed one's imagination
to gratify; satisfy
to feed one's eyes on a beautiful sight
(also intr) to supply (a machine, furnace, etc) with (the necessary materials or fuel) for its operation, or (of such materials) to flow or move forwards into a machine, etc
to use (land) as grazing
informal, theatre to cue (an actor, esp a comedian) with lines or actions
sport to pass a ball to (a team-mate)
electronics to introduce (electrical energy) into a circuit, esp by means of a feeder
(also intr; foll by on or upon) to eat or cause to eat
noun
the act or an instance of feeding
food, esp that of animals or babies
the process of supplying a machine or furnace with a material or fuel
the quantity of material or fuel so supplied
computing a facility allowing web users to receive news headlines and updates on their browser from a website as soon as they are published
the rate of advance of a cutting tool in a lathe, drill, etc
a mechanism that supplies material or fuel or controls the rate of advance of a cutting tool
informal, theatre a performer, esp a straight man, who provides cues
informal, a meal
Other Word Forms
- feedable adjective
- outfeed verb (used with object)
- refeed verb
- unfeedable adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of feed1
Idioms and Phrases
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.
off one's feed,
reluctant to eat; without appetite.
dejected; sad.
not well; ill.
More idioms and phrases containing feed
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Drip by drip, appointments were fed out through the afternoon.
This is feeding me in some way I can’t describe,’ ” she said.
Support for Reform might be thought to be simply a protest vote by an electorate fed up with slow growth, an ailing health service, and high levels of immigration.
“I would do this day in, day out. It feeds me.”
And it just fed into what we were doing.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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