What is the meaning of LOGG. Phrases containing LOGG
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Acronyms & AI meanings
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Any one of several very large species of chelonians having the feet converted into paddles, as the green turtle, hawkbill, loggerhead, and leatherback. They inhabit all warm seas.
LOGG
n.
An open, roofed gallery or portico, adjoining a dwelling house, forming an out-of-door sitting room. See Loggia.
n.
A gratuitous helping forward of another's work; as, a logging spell.
a.
Dull; stupid.
n.
The business of felling trees, cutting them into logs, and transporting the logs to sawmills or to market.
n.
The knapweed.
n.
An American shrike (Lanius Ludovicianus), similar to the butcher bird, but smaller. See Shrike.
a.
Made slow and heavy in movement; water-logged.
n.
A blockhead; a dunce; a numskull.
n.
See Logan.
n.
A very large marine turtle (Thalassochelys caretta, / caouana), common in the warmer parts of the Atlantic Ocean, from Brazil to Cape Cod; -- called also logger-headed turtle.
n.
One engaged in logging. See Log, v. i.
n.
A small log or piece of wood.
n.
A spherical mass of iron, with a long handle, used to heat tar.
n.
An upright piece of round timber, in a whaleboat, over which a turn of the line is taken when it is running out too fast.
n.
The act or process of rolling logs from the place where they were felled to the stream which floats them to the sawmill or to market. In this labor neighboring camps of loggers combine to assist each other in turn.
n. & v.
See Lodge.
n.
A roofed open gallery. It differs from a veranda in being more architectural, and in forming more decidedly a part of the main edifice to which it is attached; from a porch, in being intended not for entrance but for an out-of-door sitting-room.
a.
Filled or saturated with water so as to be heavy, unmanageable, or loglike; -- said of a vessel, when, by receiving a great quantity of water into her hold, she has become so heavy as not to be manageable by the helm.
n.
An old game in England, played by throwing pieces of wood at a stake set in the ground.
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