bog

suomi-englanti sanakirja

bog englannista suomeksi

  1. suo, neva

  2. juuttua paikoilleen

  1. suo, neva

  2. Substantiivi

  3. Verbi

bog englanniksi

  1. (ISO 639)

  2. (senseid) An area of decayed vegetation (particularly sphagnum moss) which forms a wet spongy ground too soft for walking.

  3. (syn)

    (cot)

    (nearsyn)

  4. (RQ:Shakespeare Henry 5)

  5. {{quote-book|en|year=1612|author=John Speed|title=The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britaine|volume=IV|chapter=iv|page=143

  6. {{quote-text|en|year=a. 1687|author=William Petty|title=Political Arithmetick

  7. (RQ:Doyle Lost World)

  8. {{quote-journal|en|year=1974|month=02|title=Boys' Life|page=21

  9. (quote-song)|title=(w)

  10. (quote-video game)

  11. An acidic, chiefly rain-fed (ombrotrophic), peat-forming wetland. (q), and (m) and (m).

  12. {{quote-book|en|year=1996|author=Geological Survey (U.S.)|title=National Water Summary on Wetland Resources|isbn=9780607856965|page=214

  13. {{quote-book|en|date=2016-12-19|author=Ralph W. Tiner|title=Wetland Indicators: A Guide to Wetland Formation, Identification, Delineation, Classification, and Mapping, Second Edition|publisher=CRC Press|isbn=9781439853702|page=122

  14. {{quote-book|en|date=2019-02-19|author=Sincere Humphrey|title=Freshwater Microbiology|publisher=Scientific e-Resources|isbn=9781839473500|page=24

  15. Boggy ground.

  16. (quote-book)

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

  18. {{quote-book|en|year=1614|author=John King|title=Vitis Palatina|page=30

  19. {{quote-text|en|year=a. 1796|author=Robert Burns|title=Poems & Songs|volume=I

  20. {{quote-book|en|year=1841|author=Charles Dickens|title=Barnaby Rudge|chapter=lxxii|page=358

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

  22. (uxi)

  23. {{quote-text|en|year=1665|author=Richard Head; et al|title=The English Rogue Described in the Life of Meriton Latroon|volume=I

  24. {{quote-text|en|year=a. 1789|year_published=1789|title=Verses to John Howard F.R.S. on His State of Prisons and Lazarettos|page=181

  25. {{quote-book|en|year=1864|author=J.C. Hotten|title=The Slang Dictionary|page=79

  26. {{quote-book|en|year=1959|author=William Golding|title=Free Fall|chapter=i|page=23

  27. An act or instance of defecation.

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

  29. (U).

  30. {{quote-book|en|year=2013|author=James Villas|title=Southern Fried: More Than 150 Recipes for Crab Cakes, Fried Chicken, Hush Puppies, and More|publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt|isbn=9781118130766|page=196

  31. {{quote-book|en|date=2016-10-01|author=Elliott Moss|title=Buxton Hall Barbecue's Book of Smoke: Wood-Smoked Meat, Sides, and More|publisher=Voyageur Press|isbn=9780760351284|page=113

  32. {{quote-text|en|year=2018|author=Ann W Phillips|title=Lady Of Esterbrooke

  33. To sink or submerge someone or something into bogland.

  34. {{quote-text|en|year=1928|author=American Dialect Society|title=American Speech|volume=IV|page=132

  35. To prevent or slow someone or something from making progress.

  36. {{quote-text|en|year=1605|author=Ben Jonson|title=His Fall|section=act IV, scene i|line=217

  37. {{quote-text|en|year=1641|author=John Milton|title=Animadversions|page=58

  38. To sink and stick in bogland.

  39. {{quote-text|en|year=a. 1800|title=The Trials of James, Duncan, and Robert M'Gregor, Three Sons of the Celebrated Rob Roy|page=120

  40. To be prevented or impeded from making progress, to become stuck.

  41. To defecate, to void one's bowels.

  42. To cover or spray with excrement.

  43. To make a mess of something.

  44. (alt form): a bugbear, monster, or terror.

  45. (cap); boastful; proud.

  46. {{quote-book|en|year=1592|author=William Warner|title=Albions England|volume=VII|chapter=xxxvii|page=167

  47. {{quote-book|en|year=1691|author=John Ray|title=South and East Country Words|page=90

  48. (cap), boastfulness.

  49. {{quote-text|en|year=1839|author=Charles Clark|title=John Noakes and Mary Styles|section=l. 3

  50. To provoke, to bug.

  51. {{quote-text|en|year=1546|year_published=1852|title=State Papers King Henry the Eighth|volume=XI|page=163

  52. 1556, Nicholas Grimald's translation of Cicero as ''Marcus Tullius Ciceroes Thre Bokes of Duties to Marcus His Sonne'', Vol. III, p. 154:

  53. A Frencheman: whom he Torquatus slew, being bogged (m) by hym.
  54. To go away.

  55. |internet slang|transitive| To perform excessive surgery that results in a bizarre or obviously artificial facial appearance.

  56. |internet slang|reflexive| To have excessive cosmetic surgery performed on oneself, often with a poor or conspicuously unnatural result.

  57. (quote-web)

  58. book

  59. beechnut, mast

  60. an ombrotrophic peatland

  61. (ant)

  62. (verb form of)

  63. knot

  64. soft (gl)

  65. flabby (gl)

  66. soft, mellow, gentle (q)

  67. (RQ:Amhrán na Mara)

  68. wet

  69. mild, humid (q)

  70. loose

  71. lukewarm

  72. something soft

  73. lobe

  74. soften, become soft; (gl) ease; (gl) warm; get milder; soften, move (gl)

  75. move, loosen; (gl) rock

  76. god

  77. the Child as a bringer of Christmas presents, compare (noncog)

  78. Christmas present

  79. soft

  80. shoulder (gl)

  81. (alt form)

  82. branch or bough (gl)

  83. tendril or sprig (gl)

  84. arm or shoulder

  85. wet, damp, moist

  86. god, deity

  87. (coi) (quote by (w))

  88. idol, god

  89. paragon(sl-ref)

  90. highest value(sl-ref)

  91. bow (gl)