dip into something phrasal verb (
see also dip)
1. to read short parts of a book, magazine etc, but not the whole thing:
It’s the kind of book you can dip into now and again.2. to use some of an amount of money that you have:
Medical bills forced her to dip into her savings.
Parents are being asked to dip into their pockets for new school books (=use their own money to pay for them).3. to put your hand into a bag or box in order to take out one of the things inside:
On her lap was a bag of candy which she kept dipping into. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
read to look at and understand the words in a book, magazine, letter etc for interest, enjoyment, or study:
What book are you reading at the moment?
I usually read the newspaper on the way to work.flick/flip/leaf through something to turn the pages of a book, magazine etc quickly, looking for things that might interest you:
While I was waiting, I flicked through a magazine.
She was flipping through the pages of an encyclopedia.
Cunningham was leafing through a copy of the Financial Times at his desk amidst a cloud of cigar-smoke.browse through something to spend time looking through a book, magazine etc without any clear purpose, looking for things that might interest you:
Would you like to browse through our holiday brochure?skim/scan (through) something to read something quickly to get the main ideas or find a particular piece of information:
I want you to skim through the article and write a short summary of it.
Tony scanned the menu for a vegetarian option.pore over something to read something very carefully for a long time:
They spent weeks poring over guidebooks and planning their holiday.devour something /dɪˈvaʊə $ -ˈvaʊr/ to read something quickly and eagerly:
Her young fans devour her books.dip into something to read short parts of something:
It’s a book you can dip into rather than read from cover to cover.plough/wade through something to read something long and boring:
He’s upstairs ploughing through financial reports.
I can’t possibly wade through all this.surf the Net/Internet/Web to look quickly through information on the Internet, stopping to read what interests you:
I was surfing the Net, trying to find my ideal job. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
dip into v. phr. 1. To scan or sample lightly and briefly (said of printed materials).
I didn't get a chance to read all of War and Peace, but I dipped into it here and there. 2. To take money out of a savings account or a piggy bank.
I am sorry to have to say that I had to dip into the piggy bank; I took out $6.75. [TahlilGaran] English Idioms Dictionary ▲