A soft wet area of low-lying land that sinks underfoot.
1Catched un in the quag by th' old gravel pits.
2And, lo, on the left hand there was a quag.
3Over a spread-out swamp, a quag that ate the tracks.
4Seven weeks after that he would succumb to a wasting quag disease and leave Judah alone.
5His blood pooled and thickened in the quag.
6They belonged to what seemed a giant body, sunk up to the shoulders in a quag.
7The mud floor became a quag: I seized a spade and shovelled it clean, mud and slime and worse filth together.
8This I did, and the deer ran for the shore, Burr pushed his boat to the quag, took the jack, and followed the track.
9Into that quag King David once did fall, and had no doubt therein been smothered, had not HE that is able plucked him out.
10Dr. Dodd considers that by the deep ditch is intended "presumptuous hopes," and the no less dangerous quag to be "despairing fears"-(ED).
11The noisy alarum told him he floundered in quags, like a silly creature chasing a marsh-lamp.
12Suburb there succeeds to dirty suburb, the roads are quags or deep in dust, the company as disagreeable as it is mean.
13"But the light is at the inn, and there is no quag in front of that."
14"There is a quag between us and that light, and you will walk into it up to your neck unless I take you round."
15Catched un in the quag by th' old gravel pits.
16And, lo, on the left hand there was a quag.