: any of numerous small widely distributed oscine birds (family Hirundinidae, the swallow family) that have a short bill, long pointed wings, and often a deeply forked tail and that feed on insects caught on the wing
2
: any of several birds that superficially resemble swallows
Verb
He swallowed the grape whole.
Chew your food well before you swallow.
The boss said, “Come in.” I swallowed hard and walked in.
Her story is pretty hard to swallow.
I can usually take criticism, but this is more than I can swallow. Noun (1)
drank the cool refreshing water in two swallows and held out her cup for more
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Verb
Stopa went on the run, later killing herself by swallowing poison in a Detroit hotel room.—
Kori Rumore,
Chicago Tribune,
11 July 2026 On its way back to Britain, the vessel was eventually swallowed up in the New Ground Reef.—
Amara Evering,
Miami Herald,
11 July 2026
Noun
The afflicted slowly lose their ability to walk, talk, eat, dress, write, swallow and, eventually, breathe.—
Ryan Morik,
FOXNews.com,
4 July 2026 Over time, people with ALS can lose the ability to move, speak, swallow and eventually breathe on their own.—
Dave Quinn,
PEOPLE,
30 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for swallow
Word History
Etymology
Verb
Middle English swalowen, from Old English swelgan; akin to Old High German swelgan to swallow
Noun (2)
Middle English swalowe, from Old English swealwe; akin to Old High German swalawa swallow