HOG


Meaning of HOG in English

I. ˈhȯg, -ä- noun

( plural hogs also hog )

Usage: often attributive

Etymology: Middle English hogge, from Old English hogg, perhaps of Celtic origin; akin to Welsh hwch hog, Cornish hoch — more at sow

1.

a. : a domestic swine : pig , sow , boar ; especially : an adult or a growing animal weighing more than 120 pounds — compare pork

b. Britain : barrow II

c. : a wild boar ; broadly : any of various animals of the family Suidae — usually used in combination

the wart hogs and river hogs are tropical relatives of our domestic swine

2. usually hogg Britain

a. : a young sheep usually less than or about a year in age and not yet shorn ; also : wool from such a sheep

b. : a young domestic animal (as a bullock) of similar age — often used in combination

several good hogg colts

3. : a person felt to resemble a hog especially in selfishness, gluttony, or filthiness — often used in combination

4. or hogg slang

a. Britain : shilling

b. : dime

5. : a curling stone that fails to pass the hog score

6. : a machine with revolving cutters for reducing bulk material (as waste lumber or animal carcasses) to small bits — called also hogger

7. : a frame of timber or a heavy flat rough broom hauled along a ship's bottom under water to clean it

8. : an agitator for mixing and stirring pulp in papermaking

9. slang : a railroad locomotive

- on the hog

II. verb

( hogged ; hogged ; hogging ; hogs )

transitive verb

1. : to cut (a horse's mane) short : roach

2. : to clean the bottom of (a ship) with a hog

3.

a. : to cause to arch like the back of a hog

b. : to cause (as a ship or timber) to bow up in the middle and sag at the ends usually as a result of improper loading or supporting

4.

a. Britain : to winter over (young sheep)

b. : to utilize (an unharvested crop) by turning in hogs to feed — often used with down or off

got a drove of gilts to hog down the corn

it would be cheaper to hog off that piece than to harvest it

5.

a. : to take, grasp, or retain selfishly or in excess of one's due or need

don't hog the light, I want to read too

hogging everything in sight

b. : to consume voraciously — usually used with down

hogged down his dinner and rushed out

finished the book next day, hogging it down in great gulps — Bruce Marshall

6. : to play (a curling stone) so as not to pass the hog score

7. : to tear up or shred (bulk material) into bits with a hog

intransitive verb

1. : to become curved upward in the middle like a hog's back — used especially of a ship or its bottom or keel

2. : to act like a hog especially in taking more than one's share

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.