

Hodges finally sits, and I munch on sour dough bread in between sips of the luscious vintage.The dolls are supposed to munch on plastic food that comes in the box.A roe deer came down into reeds opposite to munch at green stuff.We sat with the four or five others already there and began munching on bread baked in the adjacent kitchen.Their conversation had a munching sound.I munched secretively, washing my food down with a swallow, of coffee.We sipped black coffee and munched on homemade biscuits.Who wants to count calories and munch on a piece of dry toast at such a time?.We then watched it buttonhole every munching matriarch in the flock, crying, ` Did you see?.He took it out to hold and to watch it munch clover.Mice munch away on aconites and love to nibble newly sown peas and beans.His son, Francis, was munching away, his protuberant eyes fixed on his father in an unwavering stare.Jamie came out of the store munching a bag of potato chips.Following the great triumph of French Impressionism, Munch. He expressed these obsessions through works of intense color, semi-abstraction, and mysterious subject matter. → See Verb table Examples from the Corpus munch Edvard Munch was a prolific yet perpetually troubled artist preoccupied with matters of human mortality such as chronic illness, sexual liberation, and religious aspiration. They’d munched their way through (=eaten all of ) three packets of biscuits. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Food munch munch / mʌntʃ / verb DF EAT to eat something noisily munch on/at Barry sat munching on an apple.
