cave 
I. noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES Aladdin's Cave ▪ Her apartment is an Aladdin's Cave of antiques, old books, and fine paintings. COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
ADJECTIVE dark ▪ The door was flung wide, and inside lay a dark cave. ▪ We pass rocky beaches, secret inlets, muddy coves, dark hidden sea caves pounded by surf. ▪ When Jean-Claude emerged from the hide-out, he held out his arm and dragged me into the dark cave. ▪ Others, such as the Delphic Python, live in dark moist caves. ▪ Inside, these dwellings were dark like caves. ▪ He carried her off to the dark cave. ▪ No more visits to dark, ghostly caves, Roman!
NOUN art ▪ Primitivism To look at the mystery of cave art means first of all to look at our own prejudices. dweller ▪ Aggression would have given a survival advantage in cave dweller days and earlier and so would have been favored by natural selection. entrance ▪ Gnome passage, where we headed after leaving the cave entrance, was one of the highlights of the cave for me. ▪ Prior to each flight, rangers offer free programs in a seating area near the cave entrance. ▪ Some of these riverbank cave entrances are submerged when the river is in spate making their underground passages subject to sudden flooding. ▪ The enterprising walker could reach Cape Matapan and look for the cave entrance to Hades. ▪ He became very aggressive to any other fish that came near his cave entrance. painting ▪ Certainly some of their art, such as cave paintings, survives and may provide a clue as to how they thought. ▪ In other words, the dangers of the Internet are as old as cave paintings. ▪ All these concepts have been applied, successively, to prehistoric cave paintings, with different but always arbitrary results. ▪ Siberia became a center for the same culture that had produced the cave paintings. ▪ The opportunity for cave painting, in an artificial cave, demonstrated man's earliest use of pigments as paints. ▪ The Cro-Magnon cave paintings demonstrate that wild animals also can be part of the family. system ▪ Intermittent drainage, underground watercourses and vast cave systems are features of the karst. ▪ At 3.1 kilometers, this dive is the longest underwater traverse of two cave systems in the world.
VERB enter ▪ As they enter their caves, they start producing a series of high-pitched clicks. ▪ After entering the cave, Hawk senses such awesome power that he flees in terror. ▪ And for that to happen you must do one day as I did, and enter the crystal cave of vision. ▪ Previously, people entered caves to Join with the Goddess's body. ▪ Not everyone wants to enter the cave on such terms. PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES an Aladdin's Cave city/town/cave etc dweller ▪ Added to this is the vibration caused by heavy goods vehicles and the annoyance of air traffic suffered by all city dwellers. ▪ Bartlett drew from the old-fashioned uniforms of the virile football player and the preening perfection of the city dweller. ▪ But then, city dwellers have never been long on modesty. ▪ It is the dilemma of city dwellers, of all those refugees from the past in search of the future. ▪ Most shoppers know that only cave dwellers would pay the list price for electronics goods, for example. ▪ Poverty has become persistent, and apparently self-reinforcing, for millions of city dwellers, most of them black or Hispanic. ▪ This assistance inevitably spilled over as an increase in general prosperity for the ordinary Milanese city dweller. ▪ Unlike many town dwellers, farmers can at least eat well. the roof falls/caves in ▪ The Warriors were leading, with only a few minutes of the game to go, when the roof fell in. ▪ It may not be long before the roof falls in. EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ He looked inside the cave and saw a lion. ▪ He spent many nights sleeping in an open orchard in torrential rain until he located a small cave. ▪ It was inside a cave, but bigger than any cave had a right to be. ▪ One day he heard a noise coming from a cave. ▪ Only a few of us knew about the cave. ▪ She'd feel safer trapped in a cave, with some dark formless danger lurking in the shadows. ▪ The largest system is the Lancaster-Easegill complex where there are around 30 miles of cave passages. ▪ We pass rocky beaches, secret inlets, muddy coves, dark hidden sea caves pounded by surf. II. verb EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ In October, on 3 October 1985, I was feeling so depressed I thought the walls were caving in on me. ▪ It is clear that the walls around the governor are caving in. ▪ Newport looked poised to run away with it, but Bridgend refused to cave in. ▪ Sixty foot drops are not really much to write home about when some one's been caving as long as he has. ▪ Will Grijalva cave in and go with Postil?
cave
I. cave1 /keɪv/ noun [COUNTABLE] [date : 1200-1300; Language : Old French; Origin : Latin cava, from cavus 'hollow'] a large natural hole in the side of a cliff or hill, or under the ground ⇨ caving: ▪ the entrance to a cave
II. cave2 verb [date : 1700-1800; Origin : Probably from calve 'to cave in' (18-19 centuries), perhaps from Flemish inkalven; influenced by ⇨ cave1] cave in phrasal verb 1. if the top or sides of something cave in, they fall down or inwards cave in on ▪ The roof of the tunnel caved in on them.
2. to finally stop opposing something, especially because someone has persuaded or threatened you cave in to ▪ The chairman is expected to cave in to pressure from shareholders.
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