COG
\kˈɒɡ], \kˈɒɡ], \k_ˈɒ_ɡ]\
Definitions of COG
- 2006 - WordNet 3.0
- 2011 - English Dictionary Database
- 2010 - New Age Dictionary Database
- 1913 - Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
- 1919 - The Winston Simplified Dictionary
- 1899 - The american dictionary of the english language.
- 1894 - The Clarendon dictionary
- 1919 - The Concise Standard Dictionary of the English Language
- 1871 - The Cabinet Dictionary of the English Language
- 1790 - A Complete Dictionary of the English Language
Sort: Oldest first
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To seduce, or draw away, by adulation, artifice, or falsehood; to wheedle; to cozen; to cheat.
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To obtrude or thrust in, by falsehood or deception; as, to cog in a word; to palm off.
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To deceive; to cheat; to play false; to lie; to wheedle; to cajole.
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A trick or deception; a falsehood.
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A tooth, cam, or catch for imparting or receiving motion, as on a gear wheel, or a lifter or wiper on a shaft; originally, a separate piece of wood set in a mortise in the face of a wheel.
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A kind of tenon on the end of a joist, received into a notch in a bearing timber, and resting flush with its upper surface.
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A tenon in a scarf joint; a coak.
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One of the rough pillars of stone or coal left to support the roof of a mine.
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To furnish with a cog or cogs.
By Oddity Software
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To seduce, or draw away, by adulation, artifice, or falsehood; to wheedle; to cozen; to cheat.
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To obtrude or thrust in, by falsehood or deception; as, to cog in a word; to palm off.
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To deceive; to cheat; to play false; to lie; to wheedle; to cajole.
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A trick or deception; a falsehood.
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A tooth, cam, or catch for imparting or receiving motion, as on a gear wheel, or a lifter or wiper on a shaft; originally, a separate piece of wood set in a mortise in the face of a wheel.
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A kind of tenon on the end of a joist, received into a notch in a bearing timber, and resting flush with its upper surface.
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A tenon in a scarf joint; a coak.
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One of the rough pillars of stone or coal left to support the roof of a mine.
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To furnish with a cog or cogs.
By Noah Webster.
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The tooth of a gear-wheel; a toothed cam; a projection on a beam to be received in a notch on another to join the two together.
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To furnish with gear-teeth.
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Cogged.
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Cogging.
By William Dodge Lewis, Edgar Arthur Singer
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To cheat or deceive: to cog dice is to load them so that they may fall in a given way.
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A catch or tooth on a wheel.
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To fix teeth in the rim of a wheel:-pr.p. cogging; pa.p. cogged.
By Daniel Lyons
By William Hand Browne, Samuel Stehman Haldeman
By James Champlin Fernald
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Snake's-head
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