gnaw

gnaw
1. intransitive verb

gnaw [away] at something — (lit. or fig.) an etwas (Dat.) nagen

gnaw through a rope/sack — ein Seil/einen Sack durchnagen

2. transitive verb
nagen an (+ Dat.); abnagen [Knochen]; kauen an od. auf (+ Dat.) [Fingernägeln]

gnaw a hole in something — ein Loch in etwas (Akk.) nagen

* * *
[no:]
verb
(to bite or chew with a scraping movement: The dog was gnawing a large bone; The mice have gnawed holes in the walls of this room.) zernagen
- academic.ru/31502/gnawing">gnawing
* * *
gnaw
[nɔ:, AM nɑ:]
I. vi
1. (chew)
to \gnaw on/at sth an etw dat nagen; person auf/an etw dat kauen
2. (fig: deplete)
to \gnaw away at sth an etw akk zehren [o fig nagen]; corrosion, rust etw zerfressen
3. (fig: bother)
sth \gnaws at sb feeling etw nagt an jdm, etw quält jdn
II. vt
1. (chew)
to \gnaw sth an etw dat kauen; animal an etw dat fressen [o nagen]
rats had \gnawed their way into a sack of corn Ratten hatten sich in einen Getreidesack hineingefressen
to \gnaw one's fingernails an seinen Fingernägeln kauen
to \gnaw the flesh off the bone das Fleisch vom Knochen abnagen
2. usu passive (fig: pursue)
to be \gnawed by doubt/fear/guilt von Zweifel/Angst/Schuld geplagt sein
* * *
[nɔː]
1. vt
nagen an (+dat); fingernails also kauen an (+dat); (rust, disease) fressen an (+dat); hole nagen; (fig) person (hunger, anxiety) quälen; (remorse) verzehren

to gnaw sth off — etw abnagen

the box had been gnawed by the rats — die Ratten hatten die Kiste angenagt

2. vi
nagen

to gnaw at sth — an etw (dat) nagen; (rust, disease) sich durch etw fressen

to gnaw at sb (fig) — jdn quälen

to gnaw on sth — an etw (dat) nagen

to gnaw through sth — etw durchnagen

* * *
gnaw [nɔː] prät gnawed, pperf gnawed, gnawn [nɔːn]
A v/t
1. a) nagen an (dat) (auch fig), ab-, zernagen:
gnaw one’s fingernails an den Fingernägeln kauen
b) ein Loch etc nagen (into in akk):
gnaw one’s way into B 2
2. zerfressen (Säure etc)
3. fig quälen, aufreiben, zermürben
B v/i
1. nagen:
gnaw at A 1
2. gnaw into sich einfressen in (akk)
3. fig nagen, zermürben:
gnaw at A 3
* * *
1. intransitive verb

gnaw [away] at something — (lit. or fig.) an etwas (Dat.) nagen

gnaw through a rope/sack — ein Seil/einen Sack durchnagen

2. transitive verb
nagen an (+ Dat.); abnagen [Knochen]; kauen an od. auf (+ Dat.) [Fingernägeln]

gnaw a hole in something — ein Loch in etwas (Akk.) nagen

* * *
v.
abnagen v.
nagen v.

English-german dictionary. 2013.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Schlagen Sie auch in anderen Wörterbüchern nach:

  • Gnaw — is the name of a Sharkticon, in the fictional Transformers universe.It is also a chewing action that most rodents do.Generation 1Transformers character name =Gnaw caption =Wheelie and Gnaw affiliation =Decepticon subgroup =Sharkticons rank =… …   Wikipedia

  • gnaw´er — gnaw «n», verb, gnawed, gnawed or gnawn, gnaw|ing. –v.t. 1. to bite at and wear away: »A mouse has gnawed the cover of this box. 2. to make by biting: »A rat can gnaw a hole through wood …   Useful english dictionary

  • gnaw — [no: US no:] v [I,T always + adverb/preposition] [: Old English; Origin: gnagan] to keep biting something hard = ↑chew ▪ Dexter gnawed his pen thoughtfully. ▪ A rat had gnawed a hole in the box. gnaw at/on ▪ The puppy was gnawing on a bone. gnaw… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • gnaw — [ nɔ ] verb intransitive or transitive to keep biting something: David gnawed his lip, obviously worried. A rat had gnawed through the cable. gnaw ,at or ,gnaw a way at phrasal verb transitive gnaw (away) at someone if something gnaws at you, you …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • Gnaw — Gnaw, v. i. To use the teeth in biting; to bite with repeated effort, as in eating or removing with the teeth something hard, unwieldy, or unmanageable. [1913 Webster] I might well, like the spaniel, gnaw upon the chain that ties me. Sir P.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Gnaw — (n[add]), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Gnawed} (n[add]d); p. pr. & vb. n. {Gnawing}.] [OE. gnawen, AS. gnagan; akin to D. knagen, OHG. gnagan, nagan, G. nagen, Icel. & Sw. gnaga, Dan. gnave, nage. Cf. {Nag} to tease.] 1. To bite, as something hard or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • gnaw — O.E. gnagan (pt. *gnog, pp. gnagan) to gnaw, a common Germanic word (Cf. O.S. gnagan, O.N., Swed. gnaga, M.Du., Du. knagen, O.H.G. gnagan, Ger. nagen to gnaw ), probably imitative of gnawing. Related: Gnawed; gnawing …   Etymology dictionary

  • gnaw — [nô] vt. gnawed, gnawed or Rare gnawn, gnawing [ME gnawen < OE gnagen, akin to Ger nagen (OHG gnagan) < IE * ghnēgh < base * ghen , to gnaw away, rub away > GNASH, GNAT] 1. to cut, bite, and wear away bit by bit with the teeth 2. to… …   English World dictionary

  • gnaw — [v1] bite, chew champ, chaw, chomp, consume, corrode, crunch, devour, eat, eat away, erode, gum, masticate, munch, nibble, wear; concepts 169,185 gnaw [v2] be bothered, worried about annoy, bedevil, beleague, distress, eat at*, fret, harass,… …   New thesaurus

  • gnaw — index obsess, pique Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • gnaw — vb *bite, champ, gnash Analogous words: fret, *abrade: *worry, annoy …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”