释义 |
plodge, v. Chiefly dial.|plɒdʒ| Also pludge. [Onomatopœic; allied to plod, but with expressive change of final consonant; perh. influenced by plunge.] intr. To wade or walk heavily in water, soft ground, or anything in which the feet sink.
1825Brockett N.C. Gloss., Plodge, to wade through water, to plunge. 1855Robinson Whitby Gloss., To Plodge, to plunge up and down in water with the feet. 1863Robson Bards of Tyne 27 To see the folks a' duckin; men an' wives together pludg'd. 1885Fortnt. in Waggonette 63 What work to plodge through it [heather] for hour after hour! |