slog 的 3 个定义
slogged, slog·ging.
- to hit hard, as in boxing or cricket; slug.
 - to drive with blows.
 
slogged, slog·ging.
- to deal heavy blows.
 - to walk or plod heavily.
 - to toil.
 
- a long, tiring walk or march.
 - long, laborious work.
 - a heavy blow.
 
slog 近义词
plod
更多slog例句
- The 50 millimeters of foam underfoot also virtually eliminated the chronic knee and hip pain I typically experience after long downhill slogs.
 - The winner of the Grade I Santa Anita Derby is built for the 1½-mile slog at the Belmont.
 - Diplomats should work hard to revive it, but it will be a steep, uphill slog.
 - Just writing down the formulas for simple gravitational affairs is a slog.
 - The unending slog of poverty is also a major risk factor for postpartum depression, with little problems snowballing.
 - Neither, too, was as chilling, as affecting, or, at times, as much of a slog.
 - These are, in mechanical terms, simple fixes; politically, a nigh-impossible slog.
 - It is a mighty tough slog, I will have to give them that, written in terse and exclusive science-ese.
 - Still, the Oklahoma House speaker has a long slog before him.
 - But it serves no one to perpetuate the idea that parenting is supposed to be an agonizing and thankless slog.
 - Still Captain Culler broke a window in the Kildare street club with a slog to square leg.
 - Reason dictates that I should foot-slog it to Bloodstock and try and get the police moving; but I can't leave you here.
 - Then turn to again with a will, slog away till dusk, and so home to the old barn.
 - "I'll keep 'em on board and make 'em work their passage," he said to his mate, a mean chap by the name of Slog.
 - In his best day he gave an original etymology of the schoolboy-ism slog.