trog

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See also: Trog, trög, and tròg

English

Pronunciation

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  • Audio (AU):(file)

Etymology 1

Short for troglodyte.

Noun

trog (plural trogs)

  1. (slang, UK) A hooligan, lout.
    • 1984, Martin Amis, Money, Vintage 2005, p. 253:
      ‘I'm sharing a cell with a couple of trogs who make you look like the swan of Avon.’

Etymology 2

Origin unknown.

Verb

trog (third-person singular simple present trogs, present participle trogging, simple past and past participle trogged)

  1. (slang) To walk laboriously; to trudge.
    • 2015, David Mitchell, Slade House:
      So down Westwood Road I trogged, looking left, looking right, searching high and low for Slade Alley.

Anagrams


Afrikaans

Etymology

From Dutch trog.

Noun

trog (plural trôe)

  1. trough

Dutch

Dutch Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nl

Etymology

From Middle Dutch troch, from Old Dutch *trog, from Proto-Germanic *trugą, *trugaz (compare West Frisian trôch, English trough, German Trog, Swedish tråg), from Proto-Indo-European *dru-kó (compare Middle Irish drochta (wooden basin), Old Armenian տարգալ (targal, ladle, spoon)), enlargement of *dóru (tree).

Pronunciation

Noun

trog m (plural troggen, diminutive trogje n)

  1. trough
  2. (geology) trench

Anagrams


German

Verb

trog

  1. (deprecated template usage) First-person singular preterite of trügen.
  2. (deprecated template usage) Third-person singular preterite of trügen.

Icelandic

Pronunciation

Noun

trog n (genitive singular trogs, nominative plural trog)

  1. trough

Declension

Anagrams


Manx

Verb

trog (verbal noun troggal, past participle troggit)

  1. to lift, raise, hoist, raise up, elevate, heave (as shoulders), boost
  2. to gather up
  3. to rig up, construct, build
  4. to elaborate
  5. to input
  6. to take
  7. to invoke
  8. to wind, winch
  9. to put up
  10. to breed
  11. to rear, nurture, train (as child)
  12. to arise
  13. to pull in
  14. to set in rows
  15. to sing up
  16. to harvest
  17. to rally
  18. to pick up
  19. to freshen (of wind)
  20. to contract (as disease)
  21. to pick off

Mutation

Template:gv mut cons

Derived terms


Old English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *trugaz. Related to Dutch trog, German Trog, Icelandic trog.

Pronunciation

Noun

trog m

  1. trough
    Þā swīn ǣton of þām troge.
    The pigs ate from the trough.

Declension

Descendants

  • Middle English: trogh