D
Dicread
HomeDictionaryFfeeding

feeding

providing food / supplying material / eating / nourishment process / Supply something to someone or something on a regular basis. / Eat a specified type of food. / Take nourishment. / The act or process of providing food or nourishment. / A supply of food or fuel.

/ˈfiːdɪŋ/

Transitive VerbIntransitive Verb[C/U] Both
past: fedpp: feding: feeding

The central concept is the act of supplying a necessary resource to sustain something, whether that be biological life, a mechanical process, or an abstract desire. In biological contexts, it carries a nurturing or survival-based connotation. When used as 'feeding on', the tone shifts toward a predatory or naturalistic cycle of consumption. In technical and systemic contexts, it describes a steady, controlled input. It suggests a flowlike paper into a printer or data into an algorithmwhere the 'food' is information or material required for the system to function. When applied to habits or emotions (e.g., "feeding a habit"), the word takes on a negative or cautionary nuance, suggesting the reinforcement of something potentially harmful through constant supply.

Uncountable when referring to the general activity or routine ('feeding time at the zoo'). Countable when referring to a specific, measured delivery or instance of supplying food or fuel ('a steady feeding of coal into the furnace').

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Chloe's apartment living room, Ryan is engrossed in his game.
Chloe Smith

Are you still feeding that game? You've been on it all day.

Chloe Smith
Ryan
Ryan

Almost done. Just one more match, we're trying to clutch it.

💡
Chloe uses 'feeding that game' as an idiom, expressing annoyance that Ryan is indulging or sustaining his gaming habit for an excessive period. Ryan, being oblivious, responds literally about his game's status, using gaming slang 'clutch it' which means to win a difficult situation or round.

Meanings

Transitive Verbproviding food
[~ something to someone][~ something][~ someone something][~ someone]

Provide food or nourishment to a person or animal.

"feed the baby"

Transitive Verbsupplying material
[~ something into something][~ something]

Supply or put something into a machine or system.

"feed paper into printer"

Transitive Verbeating
[~ something]

Provide a substance or ingredient for a process or reaction.

"feed yeast to dough"

Transitive Verbnourishment process
[~ something]

Provide information or data to a computer or system.

"feed data to program"

Transitive Verb
[~ something]

Supply something to someone or something on a regular basis.

"feed a habit"

Intransitive Verb
[~ on something]

Eat a specified type of food.

"owls feed on mice"

Intransitive Verb

Take nourishment.

"the baby is feeding"

Noun

The act or process of providing food or nourishment.

"animal feeding time"

Noun

A supply of food or fuel.

"a steady feeding"

Collocations & Compounds

baby feeding

The process of giving food to an infant.

We are looking for advice on baby feeding techniques.

tube feeding

The administration of liquid food through a tube inserted into the stomach or intestine.

The patient requires long-term tube feeding.

animal feeding

The practice of providing food for animals.

The farm's schedule includes daily animal feeding.

emergency feeding

Providing food in a situation of crisis or disaster.

Aid organizations are coordinating emergency feeding efforts.

early feeding

The act of feeding a baby or patient soon after birth or surgery.

Research suggests benefits to early feeding after certain operations.

Etymology

The word 'feeding' originates from the Old English word 'fēdan', meaning 'to give food to, nourish, sustain'. This verb itself comes from the Proto-Germanic extit{fōdijan}, a causative form of extit{fōdaz}, meaning 'food'. The ultimate root is the Proto-Indo-European extit{peh₂-}, meaning 'to protect, to pasture, to feed'. The word has remained remarkably stable in its core meaning throughout the history of the English language, evolving from its Germanic origins into its modern English form.

Related Words

Last Updated: June 9, 2026Report an Error