bog
bog
suo
yhteys|BrE|slangi|k=en vessa
Liittyvät sanat: bogovski, Bog, boginja
Synonyymisanakirja
bog
suo, turvesuo, neva, hetteikkö, räme, letto, mutakuoppa, kosteikko, katkaista, purkaa, lakkauttaa, keskeyttää, jumittua, juuttua paikoilleen, hidastaa, hiljentää, hidastua.
Slangisanakirja
boga: asiakas / uhri
bogaa: hankkia seuralainen
bognaa: hypellä / astella heikolla jäällä
bogoilu: nykytanssi / "pomppailu"
Rimmaavat sanat
bog rimmaa näiden kanssa:
hot dog, smog...
Englannin sanakirja
bog (englanti > suomi)
bog englanniksi
puhekieltä An area of decayed vegetation (particularly sphagnum moss) which forms a wet spongy ground too soft for walking; a marsh or swamp.
(a.) w:William Dunbar|William Dunbar, Poems:
(c.) w:William Shakespeare|William Shakespeare, w:Henry V (play)|The Chronicle History of Henry the Fift, Act III, Scene vii, l. 56:
1612, John Speed, The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britaine, Vol. IV, Ch. iv, p. 143:
puhekieltä confusion Confusion, difficulty, or any other thing or place that impedes progress in the manner of such areas.
1614, John King, Vitis Palatina, p. 30:
(a.) w:Robert Burns|Robert Burns, Poems & Songs, Vol. I:
1841, w:Charles Dickens|Charles Dickens, w:Barnaby Rudge|Barnaby Rudge, Ch. lxxii, p. 358:
puhekieltä The acidic soil of such areas, principally composed of peat; marshland, swampland.
(a.) William Petty, Political Arithmetick:
puhekieltä A place to defecate: originally specifically a latrine or outhouse but now used for any toilet.
1665, Richard Head & al., The English Rogue Described in the Life of Meriton Latroon, Vol. I:
(a.) in 1789, Verses to John Howard F.R.S. on His State of Prisons and Lazarettos, p. 181:
1864, J.C. Hotten, The Slang Dictionary, p. 79:
1959, William Golding, Free Fall, Ch. i, p. 23:
puhekieltä An act or instance of defecation.
puhekieltä A little elevated spot or clump of earth, roots, and grass, in a marsh or swamp.
puhekieltä To sink or submerge someone or something into bogland, especially:
1928, American Dialect Society, American Speech, Vol. IV, p. 132:
puhekieltä to prevent or slow someone or something from making progress.
1605, w:Ben Jonson|Ben Jonson, Seianus His Fall, Act IV, Scene i, l. 217:
1641, w:John Milton|John Milton, w:Animadversions Animadversions, p. 58:
puhekieltä To sink and stick in bogland, especially:
(a.) The Trials of James, Duncan, and Robert MGregor, Three Sons of the Celebrated Rob Roy'', p. 120:
puhekieltä To be prevented or impeded from making progress, to become stuck.
puhekieltä To cover or spray with shit, to defile with excrement.
puhekieltä To make a mess of something.
1592, William Warner, Albions England, Vol. VII, Ch. xxxvii, p. 167:
1691, John Ray, South and East Country Words, p. 90:
puhekieltä puffery Puffery, boastfulness.
1839, Charles Clark, "John Noakes and Mary Styles", l. 3:
1546 in 1852, State Papers King Henry the Eighth, Vol. XI, p. 163:
1556, Nicholas Grimald's translation of w:Cicero Cicero as Marcus Tullius Ciceroes Thre Bokes of Duties to Marcus His Sonne, Vol. III, p. 154:
puhekieltä To go away.
puhekieltä An ombrotrophic peatland.
(inflection of)
soft; yielding; tender; (qualifier) flabby; (qualifier) indulgent, lenient, soft, foolish; (qualifier) easy; (qualifier) soft, mellow; puhekieltä soft, wet; (qualifier) mild, humid
puhekieltä lobe
soften, become soft; (qualifier) ease; (qualifier) warm; puhekieltä get milder; soften, move (qualifier)
(jbo-rafsi of)
shoulder (of an animal)