jog

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
11
Words With Friends
14
Letters
3
Pronunciation
/d͡ʒɒɡ/(UK)
See all 2 pronunciations
/d͡ʒɒɡ/(UK) · /d͡ʒɑɡ/(US)

Definition of jog

11 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. An energetic trot, slower than a run, often used as a form of exercise.
See all 11 definitions

noun

  1. An energetic trot, slower than a run, often used as a form of exercise.
  2. A sudden push or nudge.
    “Even when I gave her a jog with my elbow, she kept staring at her French book. Even when I gave her a nudge with my knee, she kept ignoring me.”
  3. A flat placed perpendicularly to break up a flat surface.
    “This angle is somewhat more acute than that of the right and left walls of the Western box set; but unlike the walls of the box set, the Kabuki wall is never broken up by a jog or by a succession of jogs.”
  4. In card tricks, one or more cards that are secretly made to protrude slightly from the deck as an aid to the performer.
  5. (abbreviation, acronym, alt-of, offensive)Acronym of Jewish occupation government

verb

  1. (transitive)To push slightly; to move or shake with a push or jerk, as to gain the attention of; to jolt.
    “jog one's elbow”
    “c. 1593, John Donne, Satire I, Now leaps he upright, Joggs me, and cryes: Do you see Yonder well favoured youth? Oh, ’tis hee That dances so divinely”
    “When now was wasted more than half the night, And the stars faded at approaching light; Sudden I jogg’d Ulysses, who was laid Fast by my side, and shiv’ring thus I said.”
  2. (transitive)To shake, stir or rouse.
    “I tried desperately to jog my memory.”
  3. (intransitive)To walk or ride forward with a jolting pace; to move at a heavy pace, trudge; to move on or along.
    “Jog on, jog on, the foot-path way.”
    “1673, John Milton, “Another on the same” preceded by “On the University Carrier, who sickn’d in the time of his vacancy, being forbid to go to London, by reason of the Plague” referring to Thomas Hobson, in Poems, &c. upon Several Occasions, London: Tho. Dring, p. 33, Here lieth one who did most truly prove, That he could never die while he could move, So hung his destiny, never to rot, While he might still jogg on and keep his trot,”
    “When we had towed about four Days more, our Gunner, who was our Pilot, begun to observe that we did not keep our right Course so exactly as we ought, the River winding away a little towards the North, and gave us Notice accordingly. However, we were not willing to lose the Advantage of Water-Carriage, at least not till we were forced to it; so we jogg’d on, and the River served us about Threescore Miles further […]”
    “That fiery doctor who had hailed me friend, Did it because my by-paths, once proved wrong And beaconed properly, would commend again The good old ways our sires jogged safely o’er, Though not their squeamish sons; […]”
  4. (intransitive)To move at a pace between walking and running, to run at a leisurely pace.
    “I saw her jogging in the forest yesterday.”
  5. (transitive)To cause to move at an energetic trot.
    “to jog a horse”
  6. (transitive)To straighten stacks of paper by lightly tapping against a flat surface.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

Of uncertain origin. Originally with the meaning of "to shake up and down." Possibly from Middle English joggen, a variant of jaggen (“to pierce, prod, stir up, arouse”); see jag…

See full etymology

Of uncertain origin. Originally with the meaning of "to shake up and down." Possibly from Middle English joggen, a variant of jaggen (“to pierce, prod, stir up, arouse”); see jag (“sharp projection”). Or, perhaps an early alteration of English shog (“to jolt, shake; depart, go”), from Middle English shoggen, schoggen (“to shake up and down, jog”), from Middle Dutch schocken (“to jolt, bounce”) or Middle Low German schoggen, schocken (“to shog”), ultimately from Proto-West Germanic *skukkōn (“to move, shake, tremble”), possibly related to *skakan (“to shake, stir”). More at shock.

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