swallow|swallowed|swallowing|swallows in English
verb
[swal·low || 'swɑləʊ /'swɒl-]
take into the stomach via the throat (as of food or drink); engulf, envelop; suppress one's emotions; put up with; take back, retract; believe without questioning, naively accept (Slang)
Use "swallow|swallowed|swallowing|swallows" in a sentence
1. Aerophagia (air swallowing, excessive or constant burping) is defined as a condition when a person swallows too much air
2. A Barium swallow is a test that may be used to determine the cause of painful swallowing, difficulty with swallowing, abdominal pain, bloodstained vomit, or unexplained weight loss
3. Avaler translate: to swallow, to swallow, swallow, swallow
4. (in the sense ‘the swallowing up of something’): from Latin absorptio(n-), from Absorbere ‘swallow up’, from ab-‘from’ + sorbere ‘suck in’
5. Swallows migrate south in winter.
6. * trouble swallowing
7. * Trouble swallowing
8. Swallows flying low portend rain.
9. The swallows skimmed the water.
10. Swallow
11. Then he swallowed.
12. Barn swallows in Hong Kong, 2004.
13. A huge fish swallows Jonah (17)
14. Supposing two swallows carried it together?
15. Swallows fly around inside and chirp.
16. TROUBLE SWALLOWING (DYSPHAGIA OR Aphagia) Dysphagia is the medical term for trouble swallowing
17. Swallows begin their migration south in autumn.
18. He swallowed without chewing.
19. Chewing becomes pain, swallowing agony
20. There were swallows in the cloudless blue sky.
21. Darkness is stronger and swallows them like minnows.
22. But then, of course, African swallows are non-migratory.
23. Swallows swooped through the fragrant evening air.
24. Swallowing, she moistened her lips.
25. Jamie's always had trouble swallowing pills.