SLOG vs PLOD: NOUN
- A long exhausting march or hike.
- A long, tedious walk, or session of work.
- A long session of hard work.
- An aggressive shot played with little skill.
- The act of walking with a slow heavy gait
- A police officer, especially a low-ranking one.
- The police, police officers
- A slow or labored walk or other motion or activity.
- A puddle.
- The sound made by a heavy step.
- The act of moving or walking heavily and slowly.
SLOG vs PLOD: VERB
- Work doggedly or persistently
- Walk heavily and firmly, as when weary, or through mud
- To hit hard, esp. with little attention to aim or the like, as in cricket or boxing; to slug.
- To walk slowly, encountering resistance.
- To work slowly and deliberately (overcoming significant boredom).
- To strike something with a heavy blow, especially a ball with a bat.
- Strike heavily, especially with the fist or a bat
- Walk heavily and firmly, as when weary, or through mud
- To walk or move slowly and heavily or laboriously (+ on, through, over).
- To trudge over or through.
SLOG vs PLOD: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To walk heavily; to plod; to walk through resisting terrain, as in mud.
- To work steadily and ploddingly; to toil.
- To strike with heavy blows.
- To make (one's way) with a slow heavy pace against resistance.
- To work diligently for long hours.
- To walk or progress with a slow heavy pace; plod.
- To move or walk heavily or laboriously; trudge.
- To work or act perseveringly or monotonously; drudge.
- To travel slowly but steadily; to trudge.
- To toil; to drudge; especially, to study laboriously and patiently.
- To trudge along or over.
SLOG vs PLOD: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To walk on slowly or heavily.
SLOG vs PLOD: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To hit hard, as in boxing, See slug.
- To lag behind.
- In cricket, to hit at the ball wildly and without judgment.
- To go or walk over in a heavy, laboring manner; accomplish by heavy, toilsome walking or exertion.
- To lag behind or puzzle upon the scent: said of hounds.
- To trudge; travel or work slowly and perseveringly; go on in any pursuit with steady, laborious diligence.
SLOG vs PLOD: RELATED WORDS
- Torturous, Drudgery, Uphill, Laborious, Tedious, Arduous, Tramp, Plug away, Peg away, Footslog, Pad, Swig, Slug, Plod, Trudge
- Mosey, Traipse, Wander, Waddle, Chug, Wend, Dawdle, Saunter, Meander, Amble, Drudge, Footslog, Pad, Slog, Trudge
SLOG vs PLOD: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Yomp, Dreary, Torturous, Drudgery, Uphill, Laborious, Tedious, Arduous, Tramp, Plug away, Footslog, Pad, Swig, Plod, Trudge
- Stroll, Gallop, Straggle, Trot, Toddle, Tiptoe, Traipse, Wander, Saunter, Meander, Amble, Footslog, Pad, Slog, Trudge
SLOG vs PLOD: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Manually logging account data into Excel can be a slog.
- Basically, every battle I got into was a painful slog.
- Recovery from surgery can feel like an uphill slog.
- Hiring teams slog through hundreds of Java developer resumes.
- Forerunners only won after a long and difficult slog.
- But it is a SLOG to get there.
- This campaign season has been a tough slog.
- Usually find that Sundays are an unenjoyable slog.
- TOO MUCH detail it felt like a slog.
- He lazes around while you slog all alone.
- Without an analysis and improvement strategy, you will plod along.
- Great Scotland Yard, linked forever with being home to plod.
- Trans Dept, Forrestry etc and spoke to the plod.
- Comradely plod quarterstaff curtsied huffed cab neglects cried enlightenment.
- PLOD, who could otherwise be doing other important tasks.
- Dutch plod getting somewhat upset if something else happens?
- Plod stops driver and asks for Driving Licence.
- The Configuration Unceasingly Tell plod up decree niness.
- The Engagement Gloaming Sling plod up activate rende.
- Marvin paused again in his weary circular plod.
SLOG vs PLOD: QUESTIONS
- What does'slog over'and'death over'mean in cricket?
- N/A