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  1. to bite or chew something repeatedly, usually making a hole in it or gradually destroying it: Babies like to gnaw hard objects when they're teething. gnaw on A dog lay under the table, gnawing on a bone. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to chew food.

  2. The meaning of GNAW is to bite or chew on with the teeth; especially : to wear away by persistent biting or nibbling. How to use gnaw in a sentence.

  3. to bite or chew something repeatedly, usually making a hole in it or gradually destroying it: Babies like to gnaw hard objects when they're teething. gnaw on A dog lay under the table, gnawing on a bone. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to chew food. chew Make sure you chew your food thoroughly. bite She bit into the apple.

  4. To gnaw is to bite or chew. Your favorite food might be corn on the cob, because you love to gnaw along each row of kernels.

  5. verb. /nɔː/ [transitive, intransitive] Verb Forms. Phrasal Verbs. to keep biting something. gnaw something The dog was gnawing a bone. gnaw through something Rats had gnawed through the cable. gnaw at/on something She gnawed at her fingernails. gnaw away at/on something (figurative) Self-doubt began to gnaw away at her confidence.

  6. Definition of gnaw verb in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. verb (used without object) , gnawed, gnawed or gnawn, gnaw·ing. to bite or chew persistently: The spaniel gnawed happily on a bone. to cause corrosion: The acid gnaws at the metal. to cause an effect resembling corrosion: Her mistake gnawed at her conscience. gnaw.

  8. If people or animals gnaw something or gnaw at it, they bite it repeatedly. Woodlice attack living plants and gnaw at the stems. American English : gnaw / ˈnɔ /

  9. a. To bite, chew on, or erode with the teeth. b. To produce by gnawing: gnaw a hole. c. To erode or diminish gradually as if by gnawing: waves gnawing the rocky shore. 2. To afflict or worry persistently: fear that constantly gnawed me. v.intr. 1. To bite or chew persistently: The dog gnawed at the bone. 2. To cause erosion or gradual diminishment.

  10. To cut, bite, and wear away bit by bit with the teeth. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. To make by gnawing. To gnaw a hole. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. To produce a biting, consuming, corroding, eroding, tormenting, etc. effect. Waves gnawed away at the shore; guilt gnawed at his conscience.

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    Gnaw meaning