hole up
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From hole + up. Attested from the 19th century.
Verb
[edit]hole up (third-person singular simple present holes up, present participle holing up, simple past and past participle holed up)
- (intransitive) To go into a hole, to shelter in a hole.
- 1998, John Whitaker, William Hamilton, Mammals of the Eastern United States[1], page 424:
- In the Upper Peninsula of Michigan bears enter winter dens in October; in the South, later; even in Florida bears “hole up” during the coldest weather.
- (originally US, intransitive) To hide.
- The guerrillas holed up in a small cave.
- 2005, BBC News, Thursday, 27 January, 2005, 18:50 GMT[2]:
- The battle ended a two-day siege of an apartment block, where the suspects were holed up.
References
[edit]- “hole, v.1.”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.