stog
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /stɒɡ/
Audio (Southern England) (file) - Rhymes: -ɒɡ
Etymology 1
Early 19th century, perhaps of expressive origin and influenced by stick and bog. Compare stodge.
Verb
stog (third-person singular simple present stog, present participle stogging, simple past and past participle stogged)
- (dated, used in passive) To bog down; to cause to be stuck in mud.
- 1855, Charles Kingsley, chapter 5, in Westward Ho!:
- If any of his party are mad, they'll try it, and be stogged till the day of judgment. There are bogs..twenty feet deep.
- (intransitive, obsolete) To walk with a heavy or clumsy gait; to plod.
- (dialect, Scotland) To stab; to probe; to thrust
- 1992, Cormac McCarthy, All the Pretty Horses, →ISBN, page 293:
- He studied the cold gray rips in the current and dismounted and loosed the girthstraps and undressed and stogged his boots in the legs of his trousers as he'd done before in that long ago […]
- (UK, dialect) To probe a pool with a pole.
Derived terms
Related terms
Etymology 2
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “Is it related to stogie?”)
Lower Sorbian
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *stogъ.
Cognate with Upper Sorbian stóh, Polish stóg, Czech stoh, Old Church Slavonic стогъ (stogŭ), and Russian стог (stog).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /stɔk/
Declension
Further reading
- Muka, Arnošt (1921, 1928) “stog”, in Słownik dolnoserbskeje rěcy a jeje narěcow (in German), St. Petersburg, Prague: ОРЯС РАН, ČAVU; Reprinted Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag, 2008
- Starosta, Manfred (1999) “stog”, in Dolnoserbsko-nimski słownik / Niedersorbisch-deutsches Wörterbuch (in German), Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from Old Church Slavonic стогъ (stogŭ), from Proto-Slavic *stogъ.
Scots
Alternative forms
Serbo-Croatian
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *stogъ.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /stôːɡ/
Declension
References
- “stog” in Hrvatski jezični portal
Swedish
Volapük
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