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cave-in
[ keyv-in ]
noun
- a collapse, as of anything hollow:
the worst cave-in in the history of mining.
- a place or site of such a collapse.
- submission to something or someone previously opposed or resisted:
His cave-in to such unreasonable demands shocked us.
cave in
verb
- to collapse; subside
- informal.to yield completely, esp under pressure
noun
- the sudden collapse of a roof, piece of ground, etc, into a hollow beneath it; subsidence
- the site of such a collapse, as at a mine or tunnel
- informal.an instance of yielding completely, esp under pressure
Word History and Origins
Origin of cave-in1
Example Sentences
Agatha’s mental wall dropping and letting Billy in proves she has made great strides to being more than just the nosy neighbor with a rune-laden cave in her basement.
A cave in the foothills of the Pyrenees has a wall painting from several thousand years later depicting a battle fought between humans using bows and arrows.
During bad weather on Friday night, the Ross-on-Wye branch of Morrisons was forced to close after part of its roof caved in and rainwater poured into the shop.
As rescuers worked, they strove to “reduce vibration and personnel close to the trench,” to avoid causing more dirt to cave in, he said.
A man whose body was found frozen in a Pennsylvania cave in 1977 has been identified by authorities nearly five decades later.
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