SLEDGE


Meaning of SLEDGE in English

I. ˈslej noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English slegge, slege, from Old English slecg; akin to Middle Dutch slegge sledgehammer, Old Norse sleggja, Old English slēan to beat, slay — more at slay

: sledgehammer

II. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

: sledgehammer

was sledging in the quarry

were sledging out the wall — Newsweek

III. noun

( -s )

Etymology: Dutch dialect sleedse; akin to Middle Dutch sledde, slede, sled — more at sled

1. Britain : sleigh

2. : a vehicle with low runners that is used for transporting loads especially over snow or ice

3.

a. : a frame formerly used for stretching the yarns in the manufacture of rope

b. : a platform on runners that is weighted to maintain tension on rope while it is being laid

IV. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

intransitive verb

1. Britain : to ride in a sleigh

2. : to travel with a loaded sledge especially over snow or ice

a small antarctic expedition … on which we would sledge and map the coastline — Finn Ronne

transitive verb

: to transport on a sledge

millstones had been cut and laboriously sledged down the rough mountainsides — E.E.Evans

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