This means to eat. "Chow" is food, especially in the military. You'd say "let's chow down" if something looks especially tasty and you plan to really enjoy it. You could also say "He really chowed down on that burger," if someone ate something really quickly.
I'm ready to chow down!
Chow is food. You hear this most often in the military. People also say "chow down," meaning to eat. People usually don't say "I'm going to chow down on some chow," though! You could say "Want to go get some chow?" or "That dinner looks delicious -- let's chow down!"
Chow Down - 2010 was released on: USA: 2010
Leas, meadows.
Animal Atlas - 2004 Chow Down was released on: USA: 14 November 2008
let it cool down first
America! -This idiom is the Americanism for a dish of stir-fried noodles, brought to America by the speakers of the Taishan dialect of Chinese.
This means to eat. "Chow" is food, especially in the military. You'd say "let's chow down" if something looks especially tasty and you plan to really enjoy it. You could also say "He really chowed down on that burger," if someone ate something really quickly.
To do work and focus
chow, chow down, banquet, feast, breakfast, lunch, dinner, supper, brunch, feed
Mad Hungry - 2010 Southern Eats Cowboy Chow Down was released on: USA: 2011
It is not an idiom. It is an expression. The difference is that an idiom's meaning cannot be derived from the meaning of its individual words. In the expression wolfing down food, the meaning is clearly derived from the meaning of the words, and people have been saying it for hundreds of years.