Walk heavily and firmly, as when weary, or through mud.
Work doggedly or persistently.
Strike heavily, especially with the fist or a bat.
1 It means everyone involved questioning whether the hard slog is worth it.
2 So how come cycling in Ireland is still such a hard slog ?
3 He always judges how good a team is by that 38-game slog .
4 It was a slog ; I began before iTunes, using its precursor SoundJam.
5 As I write that Trott tries a slog - sweep , but no damage done.
6 I hadn't run in weeks and the first mile was a slog .
7 This is in part why January feels like such an utter slog .
8 That rendered the game's remainder into a slog to the final horn.
9 Then, as the horses made their last slog to the rail, Whoa!
10 Could England then reasonably drop him for the loadsamoney slog on Saturday?
11 What had seemed scientifically straightforward had turned into a lonely, multi-year slog .
12 You've got to slog like blazes, if you want to get on.
13 The slog of it all is starting to properly kick in now.
14 Still, this unpretentious film faces a tough slog in jaded European markets.
15 Who'd want to slog through hundreds of file libraries looking for something?
16 The response from Republicans, however, signaled a potentially long slog ahead.
Другие примеры для термина "slog"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Об этом термине Глагол
Изъявительное наклонение · Настоящее
Slog в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки