Slog - definition, pronunciation, transcription

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Amer.  |slɑːɡ|  American pronunciation of the word slog
Brit.  |slɒɡ|  British pronunciation of the word slog

verb

- work doggedly or persistently (syn: peg away)
- walk heavily and firmly, as when weary, or through mud (syn: footslog, pad, plod, tramp, trudge)
- strike heavily, especially with the fist or a bat (syn: slug, swig)

Extra examples

He slogged away at the paperwork all day.

She slogged through her work.

She slogged her way through her work.

We've been slogging along for hours.

He slogged through the deep snow.

They slogged their way through the snow.

It will be a long, hard slog before everything is back to normal.

It was a long slog up the mountain.

Jane at last passed the examination by slogging (away) at her studies for months.

Mother slogged all her life for us.

After a day slogging away at work, I need to relax.

You just have to sit down and slog through long lists of new vocabulary.

He's been slogging round the streets delivering catalogues.

He started to slog his way up the hill.

It'll be a slog, but I know we can do it.

Word forms

verb
I/you/we/they: slog
he/she/it: slogs
present participle: slogging
past tense: slogged
past participle: slogged
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