释义 |
▪ I. stog, n.1 Sc.|stɒg| Also 6 stogg. [f. stog v.1 Cf. stug n.] A stab.
1587W. Fowler Wks. (S.T.S.) I. 69 So able war, and quik, for to awaird or to eshew the blow, the stogg, and prik. c1590J. Stewart Poems (S.T.S.) II. 93 Be dints and stogs of dochtie Durandal The craig and wreat he claiwe in stelpis small. 1863J. Nicholson Kilwuddie i. xiv, In that famous muirlan' battle Trooper loons gat mony a stog. ▪ II. stog, n.2 dial.|stɒg| [f. stog v.2] A sticking (in a bog).
1890Baring-Gould Old Country Life xiii, Though sure of a stogg to the girths in a bog. ▪ III. stog, v.1 Sc.|stɒg| [Perh. f. stog- in stog-sword, var. stock-sword stock n.3 Cf. stock v.2] †a. trans. To stab (a person); to prod or pierce (a thing) with a weapon. Also with through. Cf. stug v. Obs.
a1572Knox Hist. Ref. Wks. 1846 I. 361 One of the Bischopis sonis stogged throuch with a rapper one of Dundie. 1576Reg. Privy Council Scot. II. 553 He come upoun him with a drawin swerd, and purposing to have slane him he stoggit him be chance throw the oxtare. 1607Ibid. VII. 449 [They] with drawin swordis, durkis, and daigaris barbarouslie stoggit the daskis of the said scoole. †b. intr. To make a stab with a weapon. Obs.
c1590J. Stewart Poems (S.T.S.) II. 31 Quhyls stif thay stog, And quhyls they bend about To schaw tham maisters of the fensing art. c. trans. To thrust the tool too deep in the wood in turning, chipping, or planing.
1825Jamieson. d. To probe soil, a pool or marsh with a stick or pole.
1825Jamieson. ▪ IV. stog, v.2|stɒg| [Perh. phonetically symbolic after stick, bog or the like. Cf. stodge v., stug v.] 1. pass. To be stuck in mud, mire, bog or the like; to be bogged. Also fig.
1855Kingsley Westw. Ho! v, 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. 1863― Water Babies ii. 62 Stogged in a mire you never will be, I trust. 1883M. G. Watkins In the Country 7 Let them be in peace, unless you wish to be ‘pixie-led’, and left ‘stogged’ in a deep swamp. 1928J. Y. T. Greig Breaking Priscian's Head 60 Old pedantic grammarians stogged to the neck in Latin, have done their work too well. 2. intr. To walk clumsily or heavily; to plod on.
1818Hogg Brownie of Bodsbeck iii, I slings aye on wi' a gay lang step;..Stogs aye on through cleuch and gill. 1824Mactaggart Gallovid. Encycl. 398 How angry did he [a corbie] hotch and stog, And croak about, Owreturning stanes. 1894J. Shaw in R. Wallace Country Schoolm. (1899) 354 Stog, to walk heavily. |