dig out dig up
81dig out — phr verb Dig out is used with these nouns as the object: ↑shrub …
82dig something out/up — bring out or discover something after a search. → dig …
83ˌdig sth ˈout — phrasal verb to find something that you have not used or seen for a long time I ll dig out my old college notes later.[/ex] …
84dig up — {v.}, {informal} To find or get (something) with some effort. * /Sue dug up some useful material for her English composition./ * /Jim asked each boy to dig up twenty five cents to pay for the hot dogs and soda./ Compare: DIG OUT …
85dig up — {v.}, {informal} To find or get (something) with some effort. * /Sue dug up some useful material for her English composition./ * /Jim asked each boy to dig up twenty five cents to pay for the hot dogs and soda./ Compare: DIG OUT …
86Out of the Silent Planet — This article is about the novel. For the Iron Maiden song, see Out of the Silent Planet (song). For the King s X album, see Out of the Silent Planet (album). Out of the Silent Planet   …
87dig — [13] The origins of dig are not altogether clear. It does not appear to have existed in Old English, although it has been speculated that there was an Old English verb *dīcigian, never recorded, derived from dīc ‘ditch’ (the standard Old English… …
88dig\ up — v informal To find or get (smth) with some effort. Sue dug up some useful material for her English composition. Jim asked each boy to dig up twenty five cents to pay for the hot dogs and soda. Compare: dig out …
89dig around — phrasal verb [intransitive] Word forms dig around : present tense I/you/we/they dig around he/she/it digs around present participle digging around past tense dug around past participle dug around 1) to try to find something inside a place or… …
90dig — [13] The origins of dig are not altogether clear. It does not appear to have existed in Old English, although it has been speculated that there was an Old English verb *dīcigian, never recorded, derived from dīc ‘ditch’ (the standard Old English… …