shog
English
Etymology
From Middle English schoggen (“to shake up and down, jog”), possibly from Middle Dutch schocken (“to jolt, bounce”) or Middle Low German schoggen, schucken (“to shog”); all from Proto-Germanic *skukkōną (“to move, shake, tremble”). More at shock.
Noun
shog (plural shogs)
Verb
shog (third-person singular simple present shogs, present participle shogging, simple past and past participle shogged)
- (archaic, transitive, intransitive) to jolt or shake
- John Milton
- Let them make shows of reforming while they will, so long as the church is mounted upon the prelatical cart, and not as it ought, between the hands of the ministers, it will but shake and totter; and he that sets to his hand, though with a good intent to hinder the shogging of it, in this unlawful wagonry wherein it rides, let him beware it be not fatal to him as it was to Uzza.
- John Milton
- (archaic) to depart, frequently with "off"
- 1623, William Shakespeare, Henry V, Act II, Scene 3:
- Shall we shog? The king will be gone from Southampton.
- 2007, John Cowper Powys, Porius:
- Porius's mind was divided between his excited interest in the emperor's famous counsellor and his fear lest in the growing darkness his foster-brother might shog off altogether.
- 1623, William Shakespeare, Henry V, Act II, Scene 3:
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