: the throat, gullet, or jaws especially of a voracious animal
the gaping maw of the tiger
b
: something suggestive of a gaping maw
the dark maw of the cave
Examples of maw in a Sentence
the gaping maw of the tiger
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And as such are grappling with the complex history of figures like him, whose lust for profit is matched only by a prescient sense of what the world will need next to satiate the ravenous maw of industry and global capital.—Nicolas Niarchos, Vanity Fair, 20 Feb. 2026 According to this idea, although these objects may look like supersize red stars, their shine is powered not by standard stellar thermonuclear fusion but rather by the relentless funneling of burning-hot plasma into the insatiable maw of a snowballing black hole.—Joseph Howlett, Scientific American, 5 Feb. 2026 Journalists, screenwriters, even novelists and poets, could now be replaced by the maw of ineffable code.—Literary Hub, 21 Jan. 2026 Waldo’s digital shopping cart — and McCurdy’s brusque descriptions of her late-night binges — highlight the gaping, cavernous maw of her wants.—Ct Jones, Rolling Stone, 20 Jan. 2026 See All Example Sentences for maw
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Old English maga; akin to Old High German mago stomach, Lithuanian makas purse
First Known Use
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
Time Traveler
The first known use of maw was
before the 12th century