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Definition of dwell verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

dwell

verb
 
/dwel/
 
/dwel/
[intransitive] (formal or literary)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they dwell
 
/dwel/
 
/dwel/
he / she / it dwells
 
/dwelz/
 
/dwelz/
past simple dwelt
 
/dwelt/
 
/dwelt/
past participle dwelt
 
/dwelt/
 
/dwelt/
past simple dwelled
 
/dweld/
 
/dweld/
past participle dwelled
 
/dweld/
 
/dweld/
-ing form dwelling
 
/ˈdwelɪŋ/
 
/ˈdwelɪŋ/
Phrasal Verbs
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  1. + adv./prep. to live somewhere
    • He dwelt in a ruined cottage on the hillside.
    • For ten years she dwelled among the nomads of North America.
    • The gorillas dwell in the high rainforests of Rwanda.
    Word OriginOld English dwellan ‘lead astray, hinder, delay’ (in Middle English ‘tarry, remain in a place’), of Germanic origin; related to Middle Dutch dwellen ‘stun, perplex’ and Old Norse dvelja ‘delay, tarry, stay’.
See dwell in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee dwell in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
given
adjective
 
 
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