yvlog

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bog hole

noun

Physical Geography.
  1. a land-surface depression occupied by waterlogged soil and spongy vegetative material that cannot bear the weight of large animals.


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yvlog History and Origins

Origin of bog hole1

First recorded in 1780–90
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The animal’s back half was seemingly trapped in a bog hole, leaving it fighting frantically to gain its footing.

From

It seems queer that Malachy, instead of giving him a grave in such a beautiful sheet of water, did not fling him into a bog hole, and it is a pity that there should not be any really trustworthy authority for the legend according to which it was love for King Malachy’s beautiful daughter that was the means of entrapping Turgesius.

From

A name so beautiful as Loch Sheelin would give a certain charm to a bog hole.

From

He said he remembered the evening of the wedding, he remembered the conversation at which the prisoner had been present, that he was quite sure Ussher's name wasn't mentioned—or at any rate that if mentioned, it was not accompanied by any threat—that, the only plan of violence alluded to during the evening was that one or two of the boys said that they would duck Keegan in a bog hole if he came to receive rents at Ballycloran.

From

"It war your honour they war to put in a bog hole."

From

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