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roost

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roost

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++
Related topics: Birds
roost1 /ruːst/ noun [countable]  HBBa place where birds rest and sleep 〔鸟的〕栖息处 rule the roost at rule2(4)
Examples from the Corpus
roostAll are roost sites except Salthouse, where there was a nest and the pellets collected came mainly from the nestlings.The others do not return, presumably traveling on to another, more distant roost.In the meantime, it was Amelia who ruled the family roost.Alongside the State, they continued to rule the roost.The mid-fielders ruled the roost up to the interval, but after a scoreless first half the Antrim team showed great dominance.As soon as the adventurers stop moving, the Harpies will swoop down from their roosts in the rock.The ravens had returned to their roost in the pines and were noisily getting settled when I got back.Table 2.2 Barn owl samples: nest site versus roost site.
Related topics: Birds
roost2 verb [intransitive]  1. HBBif a bird roosts, it rests or sleeps somewhere 〔鸟〕栖息2 somebody’s chickens come home to roost  (also something comes home to roost)PROBLEM used to say that someone’s past mistakes are causing problems for them now 自食其果;自作自受 After years of overspending, the chickens have come home to roost. 年复一年地超支,现在终于尝到苦果了。
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Examples from the Corpus
roostEventually, of course, the chickens came home to roost.The lessons of what it meant to be the formal authority were coming home to roost.The chickens were free to roam this winter garden, although the sensible ones had gone to roost by now.From daytime feeding grounds up to twenty miles away, they converge on Abbey Park to roost for the night.Bryan now has an estimated 50,000 to 75,000 egrets roosting in nine parts of town.Many traditionally fortean phenomena have since come to roost in the world of science.They like roosting on telegraph poles.The darkness of winter twilight was roosting on the land.
Origin roost1 Old English hrost
Corpus birds and where rest a place sleep


roost
I
roost1 /ruːst/ noun [countable]
 Language: Old English
 Origin: hrost
a place where birds rest and sleep
rule the roost at rule2(4)

II
roost2 verb [intransitive]
1. if a bird roosts, it rests or sleeps somewhere
2. sb’s chickens come home to roost (also something comes home to roost) used to say that someone’s past mistakes are causing problems for them now:
    After years of overspending, the chickens have come home to roost.


roostBrE /ruːst/ 🔊NAmE /ruːst/ 🔊 nouna place where birds sleep (鸟类的)栖息处rule the ˈroost(informal) to be the most powerful member of a group 当头头;充当首领;主宰
roostBrE /ruːst/ 🔊NAmE /ruːst/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they roost BrE /ruːst/ 🔊 NAmE /ruːst/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it roosts BrE /ruːsts/ 🔊 NAmE /ruːsts/ 🔊past simple roosted BrE /ˈruːstɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈruːstɪd/ 🔊past participle roosted BrE /ˈruːstɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈruːstɪd/ 🔊 -ing form roosting BrE /ˈruːstɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈruːstɪŋ/ 🔊 [intransitive] (of birds 鸟类) to rest or go to sleep somewhere 栖息sth comes home to ˈroost (also the chickens come home to ˈroost) used to say that if sb says or does sth bad or wrong, it will affect them badly in the future 自食恶果;报应到自己身上