hog
Americannoun
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a hoofed mammal of the Old World family Suidae, order Artiodactyla, comprising boars and swine.
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a domesticated swine weighing 120 pounds (54 kilograms) or more, raised for market.
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a selfish, gluttonous, or filthy person.
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Slang.
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a large, heavy motorcycle.
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an impressively large luxury automobile.
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British. Also hogg,
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a sheep about one year old that has not been shorn.
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the wool shorn from such a sheep.
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any of several other domestic animals, as a bullock, that are one year old.
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Railroads Slang. a locomotive.
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a machine for shredding wood.
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Curling. a stone that stops before reaching the hog score.
verb (used with object)
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to appropriate selfishly; take more than one's share of.
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to arch (the back) upward like that of a hog.
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(in machine-shop practice) to cut deeply into (a metal bar or slab) to reduce it to a shape suitable for final machining.
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to shred (a piece of wood).
verb (used without object)
idioms
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live high off / on the hog, to be in prosperous circumstances. Also eat high off the hog.
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go the whole hog. whole hog. Also go whole hog.
noun
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a domesticated pig, esp a castrated male weighing more than 102 kg
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any artiodactyl mammal of the family Suidae; pig
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Also: hogg. dialect another name for hogget
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informal a selfish, greedy, or slovenly person
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nautical a stiff brush, for scraping a vessel's bottom
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nautical the amount or extent to which a vessel is hogged Compare sag
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another word for camber
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slang a large powerful motorcycle
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informal to do something thoroughly or unreservedly
if you are redecorating one room, why not go the whole hog and paint the entire house?
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informal to have an extravagant lifestyle
verb
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slang to take more than one's share of
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to arch (the back) like a hog
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to cut (the mane) of (a horse) very short
Other Word Forms
- hogger noun
- hoglike adjective
- unhogged adjective
Etymology
Origin of hog
First recorded before 1100; Middle English hoge, Old English hogg; further origin uncertain; perhaps from Celtic; compare Welsh hwch, Cornish hogh “swine”
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.
She knows her way around the court, though she’s a ball hog, which is annoying.
From Literature
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It was another Winter Hill member who hogged the limelight.
Companies are snapping up Vernon properties and upgrading them, adding advanced cooling systems to old office buildings and filling a shuttered slaughterhouse that once housed hogs, with advanced chips.
From Los Angeles Times
“Don’t you just hate it when someone hogs all the attention at the family events?”
From Literature
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While Norwegian Haaland's remarkable scoring feats in this campaign - 27 now for club and country - have hogged the headlines, Foden is a key part of that "talent up front".
From BBC
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.