How to use in-sentence of “dig”:
+ These animals probably lived in swamps or near lakes, using their tusks to dig or scrape up aquatic vegetation.
+ In the wild, rabbits live in burrows, that they dig themselves.
+ Giza is also known for its appearance as a dig and discovery site in the fictional universe of Stargate.
+ Their front teeth stuck out: they would be used to dig up the shellfish, and pull them from any attachment to the ground.
+ Sorry to dig this up but it was just archived as I was editing this page.
+ Some wolf spiders spend all of their lives above ground, others dig burrows but come out of the burrows to wander about and hunt, and some spend almost all of their lives waiting for passing insects in their burrows.
+ Thus, the name “Topeka” means “a good place to dig potatoes”.

Example sentences of “dig”:
+ Burke's grave, Howitt's camp and the Dig Tree are on Cooper Creek upstream of Innamincka.
+ Workers dig tunnels and carry food back to the colony so that other ants and the queen ant can eat.
+ They needed the Dutch troops in the Peel-Raam Position to delay the Germans for a few extra days to allow French forces to move in and dig trenches.
+ Burke’s grave, Howitt’s camp and the Dig Tree are on Cooper Creek upstream of Innamincka.
+ Workers dig tunnels and carry food back to the colony so that other ants and the queen ant can eat.
+ They needed the Dutch troops in the Peel-Raam Position to delay the Germans for a few extra days to allow French forces to move in and dig trenches.
+ It likes to dig in the ground.
+ A sand dollar uses its tiny spines to move around, and to dig into the sand.
+ People dig into a hillside or other sloping surface and build it up so it is level in places, like steps.
+ The SS made inmates dig tunnels and lay railway tracks for the Schwalbe V project.
+ It uses its front claws to dig them up and its long, sticky tongue to collect them.
+ When the queen has mated, she will land and look for a suitable place to dig a tunnel.
+ The Curiosity rover has three scoops which can dig up the soil on Mars so it can be studied.
+ Large synthetic ones are even more expensive to make than to find and dig up, so people don’t make large synthetic diamonds.
+ In 2009, an archeological dig on the island found convict era punishment cells under the cookhouse.
+ They dig backwards into the ground.
+ He walks from an urbanized area in to a more rural area in the fields and begin to dig at the ground.
+ It also made it impossible for enemies to dig underneath the castle walls, which was a common method of attack.
+ They can dig a hole fast enough to escape most predators.
+ Sometimes they would dig into the sand to hold on during floods.
+ They dig a nest in snow on top of lake ice.
+ When we dig down we find layers in the soil.
+ Sloth bears use their claws to dig up ants from the dirt.
More in-sentence examples of “dig”:
+ A dig might not turn up all six forms, but more than two is indicative of chess.
+ The species does not usually dig its own burrow.
+ A dig might not turn up all six forms, but more than two is indicative of chess.
+ The species does not usually dig its own burrow.
+ Beetles that often dig in soil have flat legs with spines or horns at the edges.
+ Between 1847 and 1857, convicts were used to dig the Fitzroy Dock, Australia’s first dry dock, on the island.
+ After mating, females dig themselves into a den of snow on land for the rest of the winter.
+ We would dig for small Game game, dig the animals from the burrow, kill them, pick them up and walk off.
+ Yellow golden moles like to dig at the base of trees and make underground nests.
+ It will dig into soft soil with its short legs once the land has dried up.
+ Since the city has been built up with every passing job, it has become almost impossible to dig out all the ruins of Damascus that lie up to 8 feet below the modern level.
+ These animals usually do not live in the tidetidal zone, they dig themselves into muddy or sandy ocean floors, up to a depth of about 700m.
+ Macintosh users immediately began to dig through iTunes’s resource fork where they discovered that there were so many other strings and other resources that indicated iTunes was a re-engineered SoundJam MP.
+ The team leader, paleontologist Barnum Brown, was primarily concerned with excavating and preparing the remains of the ornithopod dinosaur “Tenontosaurus”, but in his field report from the dig site to the American Museum of Natural History, he reported the discovery of a small carnivorous dinosaur close to a “Tenontosaurus” skeleton, “but encased in lime difficult to prepare.” He informally called the animal “Daptosaurus agilis” and made preparations for describing it and having the skeleton, specimen AMNH 3015, put on display, but never finished this work.
+ If you dig down into the soil you may find many layers in the soil.
+ Aardvarks can dig fast or run in a zigzag to confuse predators.
+ Some prisoners were assigned to dig tunnels for German weapons factories during the last months of the war.
+ Puffins, for instance, dig a tunnel that is usually two to three feet long.
+ In a dig at Giza in 1928, scientists find a big metalic ring inscribed with hieroglyphics.
+ They use their front claws to dig a hole big enough to get their long nose in to find the food.
+ Animals dig burrows to live in.
+ Some problems with groundhogs are that they eat crops and dig around the foundations of buildings.
+ At the camp, boys must dig holes in the ground in the middle of a hot desert.
+ Others dig holes in the ground, or live part of their life in the water.
+ With its long, sharp claws, they quickly dig a hole until only their spines are showing when they are hiding in the hole.
+ Shovel : Henry produces a shovel in a Zelda-type manner and proceeds to dig underneath the bank.
+ In the breeding season they move to the coast, where they dig burrows on cliffs and make a nest in the burrow.
+ Common examples of this are razor shells, which can dig themselves into the sand with great speed to escape enemies, and cockles.
+ They often left one area of ground to dig in another where others had said there was more gold.
+ In many aspects, this skill is similar to passing, or bumping: overhand dig and bump are also used to distinguish between defensive actions taken with fingertips or with joined arms.
+ When there is a fire, the echidna will dig down out of reach of the fire.
+ Sometimes they dig more than one den, so they can move if an enemy finds the den.
+ All have long, hinged fangs that dig deep into their prey and inject venom.
+ They dig with their front feet, kick the soil backwards with their back feet, and then use their rump like a bulldozer to push the dirt out of the burrow.
+ They spend most of their lives in the darkness of underground tunnels which they dig for themselves.
+ They dig through the snow with their sharp hoofs for food.
+ Pilgrims came from miles to hear Guru Ram preach or to help him dig the sacred pool.
+ The Nazis forced prisoners to destroy the camps and their records, and to dig up mass graves.
+ One of the earliest is on a coin found during an archaeologyarchaeological dig at Parium..
+ It had strong claws on the front feet, so it may have been able to dig up roots to eat.
+ At the beginning of the recording Lennon says, “‘I Dig a Pygmy’, by Charles Hawtrey and the Deaf Aids…
+ They dig a tunnel under the ground and then dig out a larger area at the end of the tunnel where they sleep and have their babies or pups.
+ They dig a shallow hole and line it with silk.
+ Meerkats have long claws that help them dig and fight.
+ Mourning doves do not dig or scratch for seeds, but only eat what they can see.
+ What is the status now that there are more then 50k? I am too lazy to dig any more.
+ Lawrence and his team do find the sunken ship and dig down through the dust to cut a hole in the hull.
