Yes, it means to eat voraciously.
OM-NI-VORE
There are three syllables. Om-ni-vore.
Mia Vore is 5' 7".
Bert De Vore was born in 1884.
Brian De Vore is 185 cm.
Ah, a suffix is like a little friend that comes at the end of a word to change its meaning. In the word "carnivore," the suffix is "-vore," which means "eater." So, a carnivore is an animal that eats meat. Isn't that just delightful?
Christopher De Vore is 5' 6 1/2".
its just like french auri-vore its just like french auri-vore its just like french auri-vore its just like french auri-vore
Mia Vore was born on October 8, 1982, in Yorkshire, England, UK.
Well, there's soft vore, which means that the prey will sustain no injuries (apart from possibly digestion). There's hard vore, which involves, ripping, tearing, crunching, and all around mauling the prey. Hard vore pretty much always ends with death, usually through digestion. Then you have the tons of small subcategories, which are pretty self explanatory. They are: Unbirth (vaginal vore. Sometimes digestion/regressive growth) Anal (Voring through the anus, sometimes digestion) Cock vore (Penis Vore. Sometimes digestion/transformation into semen) Macro/Micro (Shrunken vore/Giant vore) Cooking (Self-explanatory) Breast vore (sometimes digestion/transformation into breast milk) Apart from those, you could probably have any type of vore with any type of orifice. Sometimes people also involve animals and creatures, such as slime vore and snake vore, but that list is too extensive. Basically, when it comes down to it, if you can find a way to eat/digest someone, then it's vore.
A fish eater.
Bert De Vore died on January 17, 1930, in Steelton, Pennsylvania, USA of cancer.