Idioms for eat

Origin of eat

before 900; Middle English eten, Old English etan; cognate with German essen, Gothic itan, Latin edere

OTHER WORDS FROM eat

eat·er, noun out·eat, verb (used with object), out·ate, out·eat·en, out·eat·ing. un·der·eat, verb (used without object), un·der·ate, un·der·eat·en, un·der·eat·ing.

British Dictionary definitions for eat someone out of house and home (1 of 2)

EAT

EAZ


abbreviation for

Tanzania (international car registration)

Word Origin for EAT

from E(ast) A(frica) T(anganyika) or E(ast) A(frica) Z(anzibar)

British Dictionary definitions for eat someone out of house and home (2 of 2)

eat
/ (iːt) /

verb eats, eating, ate or eaten

See also eat out, eats, eat up

Derived forms of eat

eater, noun

Word Origin for eat

Old English etan; related to Gothic itan, Old High German ezzan, Latin edere, Greek edein, Sanskrit admi

Medical definitions for eat someone out of house and home

eat
[ ēt ]

v.

To take into the body by the mouth for digestion or absorption.
To consume, ravage, or destroy by or as if by ingesting, such as by a disease.

Cultural definitions for eat someone out of house and home

eat someone out of house and home

To consume a great deal of someone's food: “Mrs. Baker complained that her three teenagers were eating her out of house and home.”

Idioms and Phrases with eat someone out of house and home (1 of 2)

eat someone out of house and home

Eat so much as to deplete someone's resources, as in The kids are eating her out of house and home. This hyperbole was well known by the time Shakespeare used it (2 Henry IV, 2:1): “He hath eaten me out of house and home.”

Idioms and Phrases with eat someone out of house and home (2 of 2)

eat