We have no meanings for "very boggy" in our records yet.
1 They are found in a sandy alluvium which is very boggy when wet.
2 This assisted us greatly, for the ground we were taking was very boggy .
3 Patches of the land were very boggy , but the main portion was sound enough.
4 Recrossed the Mary, which is very boggy on the banks.
5 The last two miles were very boggy , even the fresh and well-conditioned horses getting stuck occasionally.
6 The banks of the Neale are very boggy .
7 I would remember also, if I were you, that you still stand on a very boggy foundation.
8 In the evening the water fell as rapidly as it had risen, leaving everything in a very boggy state.
9 It is a very boggy hay-field, and in wet weather like Wednesday and Tuesday they say it is a swamp.
10 We then struck a creek, another tributary, spread over a large plain, very boggy , with here and there patches of quicksand.
11 On approaching it, where the springs come from underneath, found it very boggy ; had some difficulty in getting the horses through it.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Very boggy through the time
Very boggy across language varieties