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  1. Dictionary
    excavate
    /ˈɛkskəveɪt/

    verb

    • 1. make (a hole or channel) by digging: "the cheapest way of doing this was to excavate a long trench" Similar digdig outhollow outscoop out
    • 2. remove earth carefully from (an area) in order to find buried remains: "the site was excavated in 1975"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to remove earth that is covering very old objects buried in the ground in order to discover things about the past: Ice age bones are being excavated in the caves. to dig a hole or channel in the ground, especially with a machine: In tin mining today, workers excavate tunnels horizontally from a vertical shaft.

  3. excavate something (formal) to make a hole, etc. in the ground by digging. The body was discovered when builders excavated the area. Definition of excavate verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  4. To excavate is to remove or find by digging. If you have rocky soil in your garden, you may have to excavate it to remove the rocks and replace them with additional soil. Construction crews also excavate when they remove material from the ground.

  5. To excavate means to dig a hole in the ground, for example in order to build there. A contractor was hired to drain the reservoir and to excavate soil. [ VERB noun ]

  6. The meaning of EXCAVATE is to form a cavity or hole in. How to use excavate in a sentence.

  7. verb. /ˈɛkskəˌveɪt/ Verb Forms. to dig in the ground to look for old buildings or objects that have been buried for a long time; to find something by digging in this way excavate something The site has been excavated by archaeologists. excavate something from something pottery and weapons excavated from the burial site.

  8. Excavate definition: to make hollow by removing the inner part; make a hole or cavity in; form into a hollow, as by digging. See examples of EXCAVATE used in a sentence.