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swallow (v.)

"ingest through the throat" (transitive), Old English swelgan "swallow, imbibe, absorb" (class III strong verb; past tense swealg, past participle swolgen), from Proto-Germanic *swelgan/*swelhan (source also of Old Saxon farswelgan, Old Norse svelgja "to swallow," Middle Dutch swelghen, Dutch zwelgen "to gulp, swallow," Old High German swelahan "to swallow," German schwelgen "to revel"), probably from PIE root *swel- (1) "to eat, drink" (source also of Iranian *khvara- "eating").

Intransitive sense "perform the act of swallowing" is from c. 1700. Sense of "consume, destroy" is attested from mid-14c. Meaning "to accept without question" is from 1590s. Related: Swallowed; swallowing.

swallow (n.1)

type of migratory bird (family Hirundinidae), Old English swealwe "swallow," from Proto-Germanic *swalwon (source also of Old Saxon, Old Norse, Old Frisian, Swedish svala, Danish svale, Middle Dutch zwalewe, Dutch zwaluw, Old High German swalawa, German Schwalbe), from PIE *swol-wi- (source also of Russian solowej, Slovak slavik, Polish słowik "nightingale").

The etymological sense is disputed. Popularly regarded as harbingers of summer; swallows building nests on or near a house is considered good luck. The Latin name was hirundo, hence the genus name. Some sources propose an onomatopoeic origin, which de Vaan finds "possible, but the suffix remains unclear;" he suggests as more likely the suggestion that the swallow is named for its forked tail, which could connect it with wand (n.), but this is just a guess.

swallow (n.2)

"an act of swallowing," 1822, from swallow (v.). In late Old English and Middle English it meant "gulf, abyss, hole in the earth, whirlpool," also, in Middle English, "throat, gullet." Compare Old Norse svelgr "whirlpool," literally "devourer, swallower." Meaning "as much as one can swallow at once, mouthful" is from 1861.

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Definitions of swallow from WordNet
1
swallow (v.)
pass through the esophagus as part of eating or drinking;
Synonyms: get down
swallow (v.)
engulf and destroy;
The Nazis swallowed the Baltic countries
swallow (v.)
enclose or envelop completely, as if by swallowing;
The huge waves swallowed the small boat and it sank shortly thereafter
Synonyms: immerse / swallow up / bury / eat up
swallow (v.)
utter indistinctly;
She swallowed the last words of her speech
swallow (v.)
take back what one has said;
He swallowed his words
Synonyms: take back / unsay / withdraw
swallow (v.)
keep from expressing;
I swallowed my anger and kept quiet
swallow (v.)
tolerate or accommodate oneself to;
I swallowed the insult
Synonyms: accept / live with
swallow (v.)
believe or accept without questioning or challenge;
Am I supposed to swallow that story?
2
swallow (n.)
a small amount of liquid food;
Synonyms: sup
swallow (n.)
the act of swallowing;
one swallow of the liquid was enough
Synonyms: drink / deglutition
swallow (n.)
small long-winged songbird noted for swift graceful flight and the regularity of its migrations;
From wordnet.princeton.edu