"swallow" is a perfectly correct word in written English. You can use it as a verb meaning "to take down food, liquid, or pills quickly without chewing" (e.g. He swallowed the pill with a glass of water) or as a noun meaning "a type of bird commonly found in many parts of the world" (e.g. Swallows often build their nests under the eaves of buildings). Example sentence: The swallows had already returned to the fields, signaling the arrival of summer.
"Essentially the idea is simple; you just swallow a pill with the nano particles, which are decorated with antibodies or molecules that detect other molecules," explained Andrew Conrad, head of life sciences inside the Google's "moonshot" X research lab to WSJD Live conference in California Tuesday.
Then there was also bits that made me eager to find out more such as where it says, "watch the triangles in his eyes fade to nothing as I taste him and swallow his heart".
But her commitment came with a price tag many in the eurozone may find hard to swallow.
Words can't really describe the lurching feeling you get in your stomach watching a sinkhole open up and swallow a row of cars in Baltimore.
"We ended nine points clear of Aldershot in the table with a better goal difference, so that makes it even harder to swallow at the moment".
Turn out in as many polling booths as your volunteers allow and swallow your fears.
The courageous will swallow hard and join Labour.
I love the desktop app, it’s always running on my Mac. Ludwig is the best English buddy, it answers my 100 queries per day and stays cool.
Cristina Valenza
Retail Lead Linguist @ Apple Inc.