flog
See also: flög
English
Etymology 1
From unattested *floggian, a stem variant of Proto-Germanic *flukkōną (“to beat”),[1] itself a secondary zero-grade iterative with unetymological -u-, derived from *flōkaną. The original zero-grade iterative *flakkōną had been misinterpreted as an o-grade. See flack (“to beat”), also as a dialectal noun "a blow, slap".
Verb
flog (third-person singular simple present flogs, present participle flogging, simple past and past participle flogged)
- (transitive) To whip or scourge someone or something as punishment.
- (transitive) To use something to extreme; to abuse.
- 2002 October 30, Chris Wardrop, “VL idles rough when warm...”, in aus.cars, Usenet:
- I did seven laps of Fyshwick with the mechanic today. I was turning lots of heads on the last few, people must of thought I was nuts, flogging the car then stopping, then driving slow then flogging it again.
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- (transitive, Britain) To sell something.
- 2001 January 26, Paul Edwards, “Optus $5/month 5110, T10 and 2288 only 4 days”, in aus.comms.mobile, Usenet:
- And then there's my part time job at Telstra Bigpond flogging their cable network for just $67.55/month long term cost, a BARGAIN, and the other part time job flogging Foxtel at something like $50/month.
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- (transitive, Australia, New Zealand) To steal something.
- (transitive, Australia, New Zealand) To defeat easily or convincingly.
- 1999 August 16, Mr Ripper, “Nothing to Crow About”, in rec.sport.football.australian, Usenet:
- The Swannies got on a real roll over rounds 16/17 & 18 of 1987. In consecutive SCG matches, they flogged the Eags 30.21 to 10.11, followed that with a 36.20 to 11.7 demolition of the Dons and finally a 31.12 to 15.17 thrashing of Richmond.
- 2001 June 9, Cas., “Eng v Aus 1977”, in aus.sport.cricket, Usenet:
- Anyone with cable watch this on ESPN "History of Cricket" last night? Australia got flogged by an innings in the fourth test.
- 2004 June 5, Greg Vincent }:c{, “POLISER- Roosters v Bulldogs”, in aus.sport.rugby-league, Usenet:
- It'll make the Raiders look good. Getting flogged by a team that got flogged by a team that got flogged by the Bulldogs.
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- (transitive, agriculture) To exploit.
- 2007 February 6, “Suppliers the losers in Coles-Woolworths war”, in The Age:
- The environment is paying dearly as producers flog their land. Sustainable agriculture needs a new generation of energised science and technology-trained farmers
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Synonyms
- (to whip or scourge): Thesaurus:whip
Derived terms
Terms derived from flog
Translations
to whip or scourge someone or something as punishment
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to sell — see sell
to steal — see steal
to defeat — see defeat
Noun
flog (plural flogs)
References
- Kroonen, Guus (2013) Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 11), Leiden, Boston: Brill, page 144
Icelandic
Etymology
Doublet (showing a-mutation) of flug (“flight; cliff”), from Old Norse flog, flug (“flight; cliff; an illness of the head”), from Proto-Germanic *flugą.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈflɔːɣ/
- Rhymes: -ɔːɣ
Noun
flog n (genitive singular flogs, nominative plural flog)
Declension
Norwegian Nynorsk
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /floːɡ/
Volapük
Declension
declension of flog
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | flog | flogs |
genitive | floga | flogas |
dative | floge | floges |
accusative | flogi | flogis |
vocative 1 | o flog! | o flogs! |
predicative 2 | flogu | flogus |
- 1 status as a case is disputed
- 2 in some later, non-classical Volapük only
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