preg
See also: pręg
English
Adjective
preg (comparative more preg, superlative most preg)
- (informal) Pregnant.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:pregnant
- 1977, Erich Segal, Oliver's Story, HarperTorch (2002), →ISBN, page 318:
- The Simpsons have a little son and Gwen is preg with number two.
- 1989, Carole L. Glickfeld, "What My Mother Knows", in Useful Gifts, University of Georgia Press (1989), →ISBN, page 4:
- My ma's the one who told us Frankie Frangione's mother was preg again.
- 1994, Catherine Clifton Clark, The Saturday Treat, Magna Large Print Books (1994), →ISBN, page 225:
- 'Am I? Well, I'll let you in to a secret. I'm pretty sure I'm preg."
Noun
preg (plural pregs)
- (informal) Pregnancy.
- 2008, Nancy J. Howe, Dear Owie, Vantage Press (2008), →ISBN, page 29:
- Pat told me once at their house that I should not play badminton because I might fall. She, who rode horses every day of her pregs!
- 2008, Jonathan Kellerman, Compulsion, Ballantine (2008), →ISBN, page 308:
- She'd lost all her preg weight, but twenty-five months later was still a little poochy in front, favored baggy sweatshirts.
- 2010, Linda Russell, "Notes from the new-mother zone", The Globe and Mail, 8 June 2010:
- There was nothing even approaching the near-great, so (and I can't believe I ever had this much free time in my former life) I actually designed and sewed all my preg stuff myself.
- 2008, Nancy J. Howe, Dear Owie, Vantage Press (2008), →ISBN, page 29:
Norwegian Bokmål
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