These are the meanings of the letters CHOG when you unscramble them.
- Cog (n.)
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.
- Cog (n.)
A small fishing boat.
- Cog (n.)
A tenon in a scarf joint; a coak.
- Cog (n.)
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.
- Cog (n.)
A trick or deception; a falsehood.
- Cog (n.)
One of the rough pillars of stone or coal left to support the roof of a mine.
- Cog (v. i.)
To deceive; to cheat; to play false; to lie; to wheedle; to cajole.
- Cog (v. t.)
To furnish with a cog or cogs.
- Cog (v. t.)
To obtrude or thrust in, by falsehood or deception; as, to cog in a word; to palm off.
- Cog (v. t.)
To seduce, or draw away, by adulation, artifice, or falsehood; to wheedle; to cozen; to cheat.
- Hog (n.)
A device for mixing and stirring the pulp of which paper is made.
- Hog (n.)
A mean, filthy, or gluttonous fellow.
- Hog (n.)
A quadruped of the genus Sus, and allied genera of Suidae; esp., the domesticated varieties of S. scrofa, kept for their fat and meat, called, respectively, lard and pork; swine; porker; specifically, a castrated boar; a barrow.
- Hog (n.)
A rough, flat scrubbing broom for scrubbing a ship's bottom under water.
- Hog (n.)
A young sheep that has not been shorn.
- Hog (v. i.)
To become bent upward in the middle, like a hog's back; -- said of a ship broken or strained so as to have this form.
- Hog (v. t.)
To cut short like bristles; as, to hog the mane of a horse.
- Hog (v. t.)
To scrub with a hog, or scrubbing broom.