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cogged

American  
[kogd] / kɒgd /

adjective

  1. having cogs.


Other Word Forms

Etymology

Origin of cogged

First recorded in 1815–25; cog 1 + -ed 3

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The battery operated Space Express has cogged wheels and can travel vertically up or upside down on a cogged track.

From Nature • Dec. 17, 2018

And then there's the marvellous Druzhba sanatorium by the sea at Yalta, a stack of cogged carousels rising out of a bank of trees, each notch a living space.

From The Guardian • Feb. 7, 2011

"Freiland" is a complicated piece of mechanism with numerous cogged wheels fitting into each other; but there is nothing to prove that they can be set in motion.

From The Jewish State by Lipsky, Louis

But the Trade Unions were another matter, and never a billet-creating measure came before Parliament but he strove vehemently to have its wheels cogged in with those of the existing Trade Union machine.

From A Crooked Mile by Onions, Oliver [pseud.]

The mitre wheel, working with other cogged wheels, communicates the motion of the direction shaft to a cylinder carrying a pencil, to record the direction.

From A Treatise on Meteorological Instruments Explanatory of Their Scientific Principles, Method of Construction, and Practical Utility by Negretti, Henry

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