Bog

Word BOG
Character 3
Hyphenation bog
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Bog"

What do we mean by bog?

An area having a wet, spongy, acidic substrate composed chiefly of sphagnum moss and peat in which characteristic shrubs and herbs and sometimes trees usually grow. noun

Any of certain other wetland areas, such as a fen, having a peat substrate. noun

An area of soft, naturally waterlogged ground. noun

A restroom or toilet. noun

To cause to sink in a bog. intransitive verb

To hinder or slow. intransitive verb

To be hindered and slowed. intransitive verb

Bold; sturdy; self-sufficient; petulant; saucy.

Brag; boastfulness. noun

To sink or submerge in a bog, or in mud and mire: used chiefly in the passive, to be bogged.

To sink or stick in a bog; hence, to flounder among obstacles; be stopped.

Wet, soft, and spongy ground, where the soil is composed mainly of decayed and decaying vegetable matter; a quagmire covered with grass or other plants; a piece of mossy or peaty ground; a moss. noun

A little elevated piece of earth in a marsh or swamp, filled with roots and grass. noun

A specter; a bugbear. noun

To boast.

To provoke.

To ease the body by stool.

To sink, as into a bog; to submerge in a bog; to cause to sink and stick, as in mud and mire. transitive verb

A quagmire filled with decayed moss and other vegetable matter; wet spongy ground where a heavy body is apt to sink; a marsh; a morass. noun

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

Confusion, difficulty, or any other thing or place that impedes progress in the manner of such areas.

The acidic soil of such areas, principally composed of peat; marshland, swampland.

A place to defecate: originally specifically a latrine or outhouse but now used for any toilet.

An act or instance of defecation.

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

A toilet Urban Dictionary

To take a shit Urban Dictionary

(v) to defecate (n) excrement Urban Dictionary

An area of sense, highly acidic soil formed from the decay over millions of years of various forests. The source of turf. Were once common in Europe, but are now found mainly in Ireland. Urban Dictionary

A bog is a slang term on stan twitter that is made for big accounts. it’s a big account that is nice, funny, interacts with others, unproblematic. unlike regular big accounts! they’re nice people and love to make friends. Urban Dictionary

God. From "A Clockwork Orange" Urban Dictionary

Verb: To engage in purposfully melancholy or pathetic behavior in an effort to attract sympathy Origin: Coined as an analogy to the peat bog or swamp, in which animals or people somtimes find themselves hopelessly mired. Urban Dictionary

Another word for shroom which are mushrooms containing psilocybin and psilocin, that are ingested for there hallucinogenic properties. It can also be used as a synonym for any other illegal drug. This word was first commonly used by the SMART CREW (graffiti crew) from NYC. It is now often used in the New England area in many underground cultures. It is a very versatile word that can also be used as a verb, noun, adjective, etc... with completely different meanings. Urban Dictionary

Battery operated girlfriend. (sex toy for men) Urban Dictionary

Toilet bowl Urban Dictionary

Synonyms and Antonyms for Bog

The word "bog" in example sentences

"Book" is also derived from the Danish word bog, the bark of the beech. ❋ Unknown (1904)

The student bog is appropriate because it lets students express themselves and teach other students things. ❋ Unknown (2009)

The peat-bog is formed of Juncus effusus with Spagnum rugegense. ❋ Unknown (2009)

Ermm I will probably be in a boX when this happens, although bog is probably appropriate for me. on October 19, 2007 at 1: 35 pm | Reply Deborah Parr ❋ Inspector Gadget (2007)

"How about that, Josh; wouldn't you call a bog a swamp, too?" asked ❋ Frank V. Webster (N/A)

The tops of the downs in Southern England still show the scars where primitive men fought their wars or grew their scanty crops; and in the lowland plains an unusual abundance of trees will show you where once a dense forest grew, or you may infer an impassable bog from a muddy field alongside some meandering brook. ❋ Unknown (1931)

They say, wherever water is found, some or other species of these minute wonders may be met with; standing pools, and rivers, and ditches all have them; and some particularly beautiful are to be found in bog water; so with, I am afraid you will think, a not very commendable impatience, I am pointing my steps towards a bog that I know – in the wish to get some of the best first. ❋ Unknown (1864)

You may get some truly bizarre planetary climate models, involving such things as water soaking up through the ground to keep plants alive let’s see–if there is so much water underground that it soaks UP to the surface, isn’t that what we call a bog? ❋ Unknown (2010)

(tibioastragular) joint with synovia is commonly known as bog spavin. ❋ John Victor Lacroix (N/A)

Yet for all its glitzy facelift, it is still very much what Alastair Campbell would graciously call a bog-standard comprehensive with just 38% of pupils achieving five GCSEs (including English and maths) at grade C or above. ❋ Unknown (2010)

For a technologist, the bog is a rather bad place, because it makes it harder to sell the product. ❋ Unknown (2010)

Its the mix of the smell of a chemical and the smell of a bog is the best way to put it. ❋ Mark Caro (2009)

One of the main distinguishing features between a fen and a bog is the difference in flora. ❋ Unknown (2008)

But to get across the bog was a point of no small difficulty. ❋ Unknown (2008)

The colonists also soon saw that there was iron ore nearby, largely deposited in wetlands in nodules known as bog iron. ❋ Unknown (2007)

It doesn't come up on the UK spellcheck either, only the word bog, or bogging. ❋ Jessica (2005)

i [neeta] [go to] [the Bog] ❋ Brother Number One (2003)

[mate] [i need] to [take] a bog ❋ Plugger K (2011)

(v) "[Mum], you can start dinner [without me], I need to bog" (n) "Who did a bog and didn't [flush]?" ❋ Marky Mark The Fresh Prince (2013)

[Let's go] down to the bog and [get some] [turf]. ❋ Darth Ridley (2006)

“wow! did you see @stanaccount3673? they’[re] so bog!” “@stanaccount4747 is [so nice], they’re such a [nice] bog!” ❋ Suingyoongi (2020)

Good [Bog]! [What have you] [done]? ❋ Katie Tran (2003)

I'm not going to fall for your pathetic [bogging] any more, either you [snap out of it] and cheer up or [I'm gone]! ❋ Brad Hoehne (2004)

Are you going bog out tonight? Are there any cameras? I'm just going to bog it, [look out] for [boggers]. Who's bog-tending tonight? You think [we can] get free drinks? ❋ Ray Brower (2008)

[last night] i [used] my bog ❋ Maxrix (2005)

I'm going to break [the bog], that [porcelain] is going to [crack]! ❋ Shalasaska (2002)

Cross Reference for Bog

What does bog mean?

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