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  1. Dictionary
    bog
    /bɒɡ/

    noun

    • 1. an area of wet muddy ground that is too soft to support a heavy body: "a peat bog"
    • 2. the toilet. informal British

    verb

    • 1. be or become stuck in mud or wet ground: "the car became bogged down on the beach road"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of BOG is wet spongy ground; especially : a poorly drained usually acid area rich in accumulated plant material, frequently surrounding a body of open water, and having a characteristic flora (as of sedges, heaths, and sphagnum).

  3. Bog is a noun that can mean a soft, wet area of land or a toilet. Learn how to use it in different contexts and see translations in other languages.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BogBog - Wikipedia

    A bog is a wetland that accumulates peat from dead plant materials, especially mosses. Learn about the distribution, characteristics, biodiversity and human impacts of bogs around the world.

  5. Oct 3, 2024 · A bog is a wetland ecosystem with peat-rich soil, acidic water, and low mineral content. Learn about the distribution, flora, formation, and structure of different types of bogs, such as typical, pocosin, and tropical bogs.

  6. A bog is a swampy kind of ground made up mostly of decomposing plants and mosses. Nothing can be built on a bog because the ground is so spongy and damp, and no crops can be grown there. The dried soil from a bog can, however, be dried and burned for fuel.

  7. A bog is a wet and muddy area of land, or a slang word for a toilet. Learn more about the origin, synonyms, and usage of 'bog' in British and American English.

  8. An area of wet, spongy ground consisting mainly of decayed or decaying peat moss (sphagnum) and other vegetation. Bogs form as the dead vegetation sinks to the bottom of a lake or pond, where it decays slowly to form peat.

  9. Britannica Dictionary definition of BOG. : an area of soft, wet land : marsh. [count] a kind of plant that commonly grows in bogs. a peat bog. [noncount] areas of bog. bog plants/grasses. — often used figuratively to refer to a situation that is complicated or difficult. a bog of anxiety/uncertainty. — compare 3 bog. — boggy.

  10. Learn the meanings and uses of the word 'bog' in different contexts. Find out how to pronounce it, what synonyms and translations it has, and how to conjugate it as a verb.

  11. Oct 17, 2024 · Its use for toilets is now often derived from the resemblance of latrines and outhouse cesspools to bogholes, [2][3] but the noun sense appears to be a clipped form of boghouse (“ outhouse, privy ”), [4] which derived (possibly via boggard) from the verb to bog, [5] still used in Australian English. [3]