¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Sogged
1. soggy [adj] - See also: soggy
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sogged
Literary usage of Sogged
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1919)
"But pursuing an enemy through an exhausted country, over mud roads completely
sogged with heavy rains, is no child's play, and can not be accomplished as ..."
2. Publications by English Dialect Society (1879)
"Snop, a sharp blow. Soft, foolish. Soger, a soldier; also, a sea insect that
takes possession of the shell of another fish. sogged, saturated with wet. ..."
3. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1827)
"... Mr Johnson sogged aost severely a fine boy, a son of the King of Segó, placed
under his care, ..."
4. The Works of George Fox by George Fox (1831)
"And you about Newcastle, ministers and teachers, are like a heap or dunghill,
sogged and mudded; but come to the witness, else eternally you will be ..."
5. The Works of George Fox by George Fox (1831)
"And you about Newcastle, ministers and teachers, are like a heap or dunghill,
sogged and mudded; but come to the witness, else eternally you will be ..."
6. Putnam's Magazine: Original Papers on Literature, Science, Art, and National by John Walter Osborne (1870)
"After breakfast we all row ashore, and wander round for awhile to change the
scene, but it is wet, and every thing is sogged with mist, so that it is poor ..."
7. The Knickerbocker: Or, New-York Monthly Magazine by Charles Fenno Hoffman, Timothy Flint, Lewis Gaylord Clark, Kinahan Cornwallis, John Holmes Agnew (1857)
"... tide and gone down all water-sogged years ago. They were things that had n't
turned up extra-often in Mace Sloper's memory, and lie had to give them two ..."