释义 |
go to earth/ground go to earthTo hide at a location where one will not easily be found. Primarily heard in UK, Australia. I needed to go to earth at my vacation home after making that huge blunder at work.See also: earth, gogo to groundTo hide at a location where one will not easily be found. I needed to go to ground at my vacation home after making that huge blunder at work.See also: go, groundgo to earth BRITISHIf you go to earth, you hide from someone or something. The girl who had supplied the guns stayed put for a couple of weeks before she, too, went to earth. Compare with go to ground. Note: A fox's hole is called an earth. In hunting, this expression is used to refer to a fox hiding in its earth. See also: earth, gogo to ground BRITISHIf you go to ground, you hide from someone or something. Either he'd left town or gone to ground. He left the hotel and went to ground in the station waiting-room. It was a safe place. Compare with go to earth. Note: In hunting, this expression is used to refer to a fox escaping into its hole. See also: go, groundgo to earth go into hiding. Go to earth is used literally of a hunted animal hiding in a burrow or earth. Compare with go to ground (at ground).See also: earth, gogo to ground 1 (of a fox or other animal) enter its earth or burrow to hide, especially when being hunted. 2 (of a person) hide or become inaccessible, usually for a prolonged period.See also: go, groundgo to ˈearth/ˈground (British English) hide, especially to escape from somebody who is chasing you: His family never saw him again. He went to ground and they heard nothing else of him until he died last year.This expression refers to a fox hiding underground when it is hunted.See also: earth, go, ground |