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flog    音标拼音: [fl'ɑg]
v. 鞭打,鞭笞,鞭挞;训斥

鞭打,鞭笞,鞭挞;训斥

flog
v 1: beat severely with a whip or rod; "The teacher often
flogged the students"; "The children were severely
trounced" [synonym: {flog}, {welt}, {whip}, {lather}, {lash},
{slash}, {strap}, {trounce}]
2: beat with a cane [synonym: {cane}, {flog}, {lambaste}, {lambast}]

Flog \Flog\ (fl[o^]g), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Flogged} (fl[o^]gd);
p. pr. & vb. n. {Flogging} (-g[i^]ng).] [Cf. Scot. fleg blow,
stroke, kick, AS. flocan to strike, or perh. fr. L.
flagellare to whip. Cf. {Flagellate}.]
To beat or strike with a rod or whip; to whip; to lash; to
chastise with repeated blows.
[1913 Webster]


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  • How did the slang meaning of flog come about?
    2019 - the word flog has made it into Australian slang - quoting the Age newspaper article by Matilda Boseley from June 8, 2019: A Carlton supporter has been evicted from Marvel Stadium during Saturday's Blues vs Lions game for reportedly shouting abuse at an AFL umpire 3AW has reported that the man was evicted from the stadium during half
  • idioms - Flog meaning to sell in Flogging a dead horse - English . . .
    It's certainly valid to say "flogging a dead horse" to mean "selling a dead horse", but "flogging a dead horse" is an idiom meaning you're doing something pointless: whipping a dead horse won't make it move any faster
  • Origin of the slang L7 - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • idioms - What is an alternative (more positive) analogy to beating a . . .
    Stop beating banging your head against a wall, if you wish to avoid unsavoury animal-cruelty based clichés I think you were almost there since the usual form of the cliché in your question is flogging a dead horse
  • Origin of the beatings will continue until morale improves
    The earliest closely relevant match I've been able to find for this expression is from a cartoon by Lt B E Lodge, U S Navy, submitted for the All-Navy Cartoon Contest and published in All Hands: The Bureau of Naval Personnel Information Bulletin (November 1961) with the following caption:
  • Origin of tan someones hide as in Im gonna tan your hide
    Doubling back to Brockett's 1825 glossary, and an 1830 publication by Robert Forby (Vocabulary of East Anglia, a vocabulary which the title page advertises as having been collected in the last two decades of the 1700s), I observe that two other survivals (along with 'tan your hide' and 'lam') from the 18th century suggest the close association
  • Payed or paid, is there a rule for this change in vowels?
    The old pret and pp of ‘flay’ (viz , flog and flagen) show that there is an original g in there ‘Pay’, on the other hand, entered English from French paier with just a diphthong ‘Lay’ does not quite fit there, though, since it does have an old g (it was lecgan in Old English) …
  • Alternatives to break a butterfly on a wheel [duplicate]
    @blmoore - I meant beat a dead mouse as a counterpoint to flog a dead horse The former indicates action that is no longer -necessary-, while the latter indicates action that is no longer -useful- Seems different enough to me to justify a different phrase –
  • history - Are the verbs that are conjugated to end in -n in the past . . .
    But as every growing child knows, the more common form has become conjugating the past tense to end in "-ed": jog goes to jogged, flog goes to flogged, clog goes to clogged, and so on Even completely foreign words are usually regularized in English to have their past tense end in "-ed"; abet goes to abetted , blink goes to blinked
  • Origin and meaning of strealish streelish
    flog, attack, pull, pluck, tear in pieces; – where it is clear that sense (1) is based on sraoille and sense (2) on sroigheall The variations in the spelling of the verb (which, despite their very different appearances, are pronounced almost identically) are clearly the result of a confusion between the two nouns





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