bog

bog

  1. suo

  2. 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

  1. boga: asiakas / uhri

  2. bogaa: hankkia seuralainen

  3. bognaa: hypellä / astella heikolla jäällä

  4. bogoilu: nykytanssi / "pomppailu"

Slangi.net

Rimmaavat sanat

bog rimmaa näiden kanssa:

hot dog, smog...

Katso kaikki

Englannin sanakirja

bog (englanti > suomi)

  1. suo, neva

bog englanniksi

  1. puhekieltä An area of decayed vegetation (particularly sphagnum moss) which forms a wet spongy ground too soft for walking; a marsh or swamp.

  2. (a.) w:William Dunbar|William Dunbar, Poems:

  3. ...chasing Chassand cattle cattell through throu a bog...
  4. (c.) w:William Shakespeare|William Shakespeare, w:Henry V (play)|The Chronicle History of Henry the Fift, Act III, Scene vii, l. 56:

  5. They that ride so... fall into foule bog Boggs.
  6. 1612, John Speed, The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britaine, Vol. IV, Ch. iv, p. 143:

  7. certain Certaine... places in Ireland... which of their softness softnes are usually vsually termed tearmed bog Boghes.
  8. puhekieltä confusion Confusion, difficulty, or any other thing or place that impedes progress in the manner of such areas.

  9. 1614, John King, Vitis Palatina, p. 30:

  10. ...quagmires and bog bogges of Romish superstition...
  11. (a.) w:Robert Burns|Robert Burns, Poems & Songs, Vol. I:

  12. Last day my mind was in a bog.
  13. 1841, w:Charles Dickens|Charles Dickens, w:Barnaby Rudge|Barnaby Rudge, Ch. lxxii, p. 358:

  14. He wandered out again, in a perfect bog of uncertainty.
  15. puhekieltä The acidic soil of such areas, principally composed of peat; marshland, swampland.

  16. (a.) William Petty, Political Arithmetick:

  17. bog Bog may by draining be made Meadow.
  18. puhekieltä A place to defecate: originally specifically a latrine or outhouse but now used for any toilet.

  19. 1665, Richard Head & al., The English Rogue Described in the Life of Meriton Latroon, Vol. I:

  20. Fearing I should catch cold, they out of pity covered me warm in a bog Bogg-house.
  21. (a.) in 1789, Verses to John Howard F.R.S. on His State of Prisons and Lazarettos, p. 181:

  22. ...That no dirt... be thrown out of any window, or down the bogs...
  23. 1864, J.C. Hotten, The Slang Dictionary, p. 79:

  24. bog Bog, or bog-house, a privy as distinguished from a water-closet.
  25. 1959, William Golding, Free Fall, Ch. i, p. 23:

  26. Our lodger had our upstairs, use of the stove, our tap, and our bog.
  27. puhekieltä An act or instance of defecation.

  28. puhekieltä A little elevated spot or clump of earth, roots, and grass, in a marsh or swamp.

  29. puhekieltä To sink or submerge someone or something into bogland, especially:

  30. 1928, American Dialect Society, American Speech, Vol. IV, p. 132:

  31. To be 'bogged down' or 'mired down' is to be mired, generally in the 'wet valleys' in the spring.
  32. puhekieltä to prevent or slow someone or something from making progress.

  33. 1605, w:Ben Jonson|Ben Jonson, Seianus His Fall, Act IV, Scene i, l. 217:

  34. ...bog|Bogg'd in his filthy Lusts...
  35. 1641, w:John Milton|John Milton, w:Animadversions Animadversions, p. 58:

  36. ...whose profession to forsake the World... boggs them deeper into the world.
  37. puhekieltä To sink and stick in bogland, especially:

  38. (a.) The Trials of James, Duncan, and Robert MGregor, Three Sons of the Celebrated Rob Roy'', p. 120:

  39. Duncan Graham in Gartmore his horse bogged; that the deponent helped some others to take the horse out of the bogg.
  40. puhekieltä To be prevented or impeded from making progress, to become stuck.

  41. puhekieltä To shit, to void one's bowels.

  42. puhekieltä To cover or spray with shit, to defile with excrement.

  43. puhekieltä To make a mess of something.

  44. puhekieltä (altform): a bugbear, monster, or terror.

  45. puhekieltä bold Bold; boastful; proud.

  46. 1592, William Warner, Albions England, Vol. VII, Ch. xxxvii, p. 167:

  47. The cuckoo Cuckooe, seeing him so bog, waxt also wondrous wroth.
  48. 1691, John Ray, South and East Country Words, p. 90:

  49. bog Bogge, bold, forward, saucy sawcy. So we say, a very bog Fellow.
  50. puhekieltä puffery Puffery, boastfulness.

  51. 1839, Charles Clark, "John Noakes and Mary Styles", l. 3:

  52. Their bog it never nuver ceases.
  53. puhekieltä To provoke, to bug.

  54. 1546 in 1852, State Papers King Henry the Eighth, Vol. XI, p. 163:

  55. If you had not written to me... we had broke now, the Frenchmen bogged us so often with departing.
  56. 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:

  57. A Frenchman Frencheman: whom he Manlius Torquatus slew, being bogged Latin: (m) by him hym.
  58. puhekieltä To go away.

  59. book

  60. beech mast

  61. puhekieltä An ombrotrophic peatland.

  62. (inflection of)

  63. knot

  64. soft; yielding; tender; (qualifier) flabby; (qualifier) indulgent, lenient, soft, foolish; (qualifier) easy; (qualifier) soft, mellow; puhekieltä soft, wet; (qualifier) mild, humid

  65. loose

  66. lukewarm

  67. soft

  68. puhekieltä lobe

  69. soften, become soft; (qualifier) ease; (qualifier) warm; puhekieltä get milder; soften, move (qualifier)

  70. move, loosen; (qualifier) rock

  71. (jbo-rafsi of)

  72. god

  73. shoulder (of an animal)

  74. the arm or shoulder

  75. a branch or bough of a tree

  76. wet, damp, moist

  77. god, deity

  78. puhekieltä idol, god

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