Move+through

  • 51plough through — 1) PHRASAL VERB: no passive If you plough through something such as a large meal or a long piece of work, you finally finish it although it takes a lot of effort. [V P n] Researchers have ploughed through 16,000 different pieces of classical,… …

    English dictionary

  • 52wade through (something) — 1. to read detailed or complicated information. We don t have enough staff to wade through the data. If you can wade through the ads, there s useful information here about the history of the Internet. 2. to move through a large group. We waded… …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 53pass through — verb a) To transit something The dough is passed through the pasta machine several times b) To make something move through something else We passed through enemy lines in the fog …

    Wiktionary

  • 54plow through — verb a) To persevere with an activity of consuming something, both literally and figuratively. I plowed through two helpings, but then I didnt have room for any more. b) To forcefully make a passage to move through. If you can plow through the… …

    Wiktionary

  • 55plough through — verb a) To persevere with an activity of consuming something, both literally and figuratively. I ploughed through two helpings, but then I didnt have room for any more. b) To forcefully make a passage to move through. If you can plough through… …

    Wiktionary

  • 56breeze through somewhere — breeze through (somewhere) to move through a place quickly. Folks living close to the border could breeze through customs in those days …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 57breeze through — (somewhere) to move through a place quickly. Folks living close to the border could breeze through customs in those days …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 58go through someone like a dose of (the) salts — in. to move through someone’s digestive tract like a strong laxative. □ That stuff they served last night went through me like a dose of salts. □ Careful of the coffee. It’ll go through you like a dose of the salts …

    Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • 59cut a (wide) swathe through something — phrase to move through something and cause a lot of change or destruction The tornado cut a wide swathe through the countryside. Thesaurus: to destroy or severely damage somethingsynonym Main entry: swathe …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 60elbow your way through — elbow your way through/to/towards/ phrase to get somewhere by using your elbows to push through a crowd of people Thesaurus: to move through an area or objectsynonym Main entry: elbow …

    Useful english dictionary