These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'dig out.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Marcio Sanchez and Amy Taxin, ajc, 9 Mar. 2023 As the state continued to dig out from the previous storms, another one was on the way. Louis Sahagún, Los Angeles Times, 11 Mar. 2023 Photos: Here’s what walls of snow look like as Mammoth Mountain continues to dig out MaStreet names have been hand-painted on walls of snow where signposts are no longer visible. Challenge your friends and see who can dig the deepest As you dig, beware of the horrific, though cute, underground MONSTERS Use your traps and weapons to give. 2023 Although France’s interior minister has promised to requisition trash collectors to start to dig out the backlog, there wasn’t any evidence yet that many were back on the job in those neighborhoods affected by the strike. The mines are not going to dig themselves Grab a pickaxe, a fresh pair of shoes and start diggin' Dig as deep as you can to collect shiny gems and treasures But dig carefully, as the FALLING BOULDERS can smash and crush your miner. Reis Thebault, Washington Post, 17 Mar. 2023 This week, on a narrow street about a half mile from Crestline’s main drag, David Neighbours was helping to dig out his 90-year-old friend, whose car and walkway were still blocked by snow piles some 18 days after the snowfall began. 2023 Thus, in Louisiana, feral hogs continue rooting up levees, wrecking crawfish ponds, chomping alligator eggs, and digging out coastal marsh plants, which lets the ocean wash land away. Marisa Lascala, Good Housekeeping, 28 Mar. The doctor used a sharp instrument to dig a piece of glass out of my finger. 2023 Kids can smash their way through the shell and the compound inside to dig out the pieces of a buildable dinosaur. to get someone or something out of somewhere by digging: Firefighters helped to dig out the people trapped in the snowdrift. 2022 The snow has piled so high that crews have also been forced to dig out some of the chairlifts, up to 40 feet off the ground. Recent Examples on the Web Six days later, residents were still attempting to dig out.
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