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单词 pug
释义

pugn.1

Brit. /pʌɡ/, U.S. /pəɡ/
Forms: late Middle English pugge, 1600s pugg, 1600s–1800s pug.
Origin: Of unknown origin.
Etymology: Origin unknown.Perhaps compare pug v.2, although this is first attested much later.
1. The husks separated in the cleaning of any kind of small seed; the chaff of wheat or oats, the awns of barley, etc.; the refuse grain separated in winnowing. Frequently in plural. Obsolete (English regional in later use).
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > corn, cereals, or grain > [noun] > chaff or husks of grain
grita700
chaffc1000
crapa1425
coralc1440
pug?1440
shelling1598
shood1601
ray1656
scufting1688
rubble1767
cosh1787
sheeling-seeds1802
tr. Palladius De re Rustica (Duke Humfrey) (1896) iii. 1079 (MED) Mast, chasteyn, yef hem [sc. boars] pugges [L. vilia excrementa] of thi corn.
1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. xviii. vii. 562 The chaffe and pugs [L. palea] that come of Barly, is supposed to be as good as the best.
1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. xviii. vi. 20 The best way to keep onions, is in corn chaf, and such like pugs.
a1641 J. Smyth Descrip. Hundred of Berkeley in Berkeley MSS (1885) III. 25 The pugg. i.e. the refuse corne left at winnowinge.
1766 Museum Rusticum 6 338 Clean seed, cleared of the black husk, or pug, as we call it.
1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words II. 143 Pug, the integument or chaff of small seeds, turnips, candy-tuft, &c.
2. The refuse from the cider press. Now rare (English regional (south-western) in later use).
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > manufacture of alcoholic drink > cider-making > [noun] > apple pulp
pomace1572
apple pomace1664
cider-pressings1664
must1670
cider-marc1676
pug1676
pouse1704
pressing1707
apple cheese1708
pommagec1769
pummy1843
1676 E. Coles Eng. Dict. at Pomace Pugs, must, the dross of Cyder-pressings.
1893 G. E. Dartnell & E. H. Goddard Gloss. Words Wilts. Pug..the pulp of apples which have been pressed for cider.
2000 H. G. Ames Country Words 85/2 Pugs, apple pulp for cider-making.

Derivatives

pug-drink n. English regional Obsolete = water cider n. at water n. Compounds 7 .
ΚΠ
1787 F. Grose Provinc. Gloss. (at cited word) Pug-drink, water cyder.
1838 W. Holloway Gen. Dict. Provincialisms Pug-drink, water-cider.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pugn.2

Brit. /pʌɡ/, U.S. /pəɡ/
Forms: 1500s–1600s pugge, 1500s– pug, 1600s pvg, 1600s–1800s pugg, 1900s– pyoug (Scottish).
Origin: Of unknown origin.
Etymology: Origin unknown. It is not certain that the senses at branch II. represent the same word, although if the semantic feature ‘small’ is central to the senses at branch II. this would perhaps provide a semantic link with senses 1a and 2a. Perhaps compare Dutch regional (West Flemish) pugge (adjective) small, (noun) person of small stature; also used as a pet name, substituting for a person's forename (as Pugge ). Slightly earlier currency in sense 1a is implied by pugs n.In sense 6 probably influenced semantically by puck n.1 (although it seems unlikely that it shows a phonological variant of that word); at least in the earliest uses in this sense, the semantic feature ‘small’ seems to be prominent, suggesting development from the other senses at branch II. The graphic resemblance of Dutch putger (variant of putjer ship's boy, sailor of the lowest rank) in the passage translated in quot. 1598 at sense 2a is probably purely coincidental. N.E.D. (1909) gave the following quot. as apparently the earliest example of sense 1b, but this is unlikely. It may perhaps refer to a salmon (see sense 4a):1600 R. Cecil Lett. 24 Sept. (1864) 33 If you did..remember the Lo. Admyrall and the Lord Threasurer with a couple of Pugges or some vscough baugh, or some such toyes, it would shew that you do not neglect them, whoe, I protest, are to you wonderfull kynde.
I. Applied to a person, etc.
1.
a. A term of endearment for a person (or, occasionally, an animal); also applied to a plaything, as a doll or pet. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > terms of endearment > [noun]
darlingc888
belamy?c1225
culver?c1225
dearc1230
sweetheartc1290
heartc1300
sweetc1330
honeya1375
dovec1386
jewelc1400
birdc1405
cinnamonc1405
honeycombc1405
lovec1405
wantonc1450
mulling?a1475
daisyc1485
crowdy-mowdy?a1513
honeysop?a1513
powsowdie?a1513
suckler?a1513
foolc1525
buttinga1529
whitinga1529
beautiful1534
turtle-dove1535
soula1538
heartikin1540
bully?1548
turtle1548
lamba1556
nyletc1557
sweet-lovea1560
coz1563
ding-ding1564
pugs1566
golpol1568
sparling1570
lover1573
pug1580
bulkin1582
mopsy1582
chuck1589
bonny1594
chick1594
sweetikin1596
ladybird1597
angel1598
muss1598
pinkany1599
sweetkin1599
duck1600
joy1600
sparrowc1600
sucket1605
nutting1606
chuckaby1607
tickling1607
bagpudding1608
heartling1608
chucking1609
dainty1611
flittermouse1612
honeysuckle1613
fubs1614
bawcocka1616
pretty1616
old thinga1625
bun1627
duckling1630
bulchin1633
bulch?c1640
sweetling1648
friscoa1652
ding-dongs1662
buntinga1668
cocky1680
dearie1681
chucky1683
lovey1684
machree1689
nykin1693
pinkaninny1696
nug1699
hinny1724
puss1753
pet1767
dovey1769
sweetie1778
lovey-dovey1781
lovely1791
ducky1819
toy1822
acushla1825
alanna1825
treat1825
amigo1830
honey child1832
macushla1834
cabbage1840
honey-bunch1874
angel pie1878
m'dear1887
bach1889
honey baby1895
prawn1895
hon1896
so-and-so1897
cariad1899
pumpkin1900
honey-bun1902
pussums1912
snookums1919
treasure1920
wogger1922
amico1929
sugar1930
baby cake1949
angel cake1951
lamb-chop1962
petal1974
bae2006
1580 Sir G. Carey Let. in I. H. Jeayes Catal. Charters Berkeley Castle (1892) 330 My sweete pugge, the small plesure I take in thi absens will make the returne of thy swete cumpany the more welcum to me.
1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes Marmotta, a marmoset, a babie for a childe to play withall, a pugge.
1602 J. Marston Antonios Reuenge iii. iv. sig. F3v I haue had foure husbands my selfe. The first I called, Sweete Duck; the second, Deare Heart; the third, Prettie Pugge.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues at M'amie Ma belle m'amie, my prettie Pug (so fooles, hugging their bables, tearme them).
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues (at cited word) Marmouselle, a little puppie, or pug to play with.
1636 N. Wallington in Ann. Dubrensia sig. E2v Pug sang By-babie, with delightfull charmes.
1680 Earl of Rochester et al. Poems 24 But now Moncher, dear Pug, says she, adieu.
b. A courtesan, mistress, harlot, prostitute. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > prostitution > [noun] > a prostitute
meretrixOE
whoreOE
soiled dovea1250
common womanc1330
putec1384
bordel womanc1405
putaina1425
brothelc1450
harlot?a1475
public womanc1510
naughty pack?1529
draba1533
cat1535
strange woman1535
stew1552
causey-paikera1555
putanie?1566
drivelling1570
twigger1573
punka1575
hackney1579
customer1583
commodity1591
streetwalker1591
traffic1591
trug1591
hackster1592
polecat1593
stale1593
mermaid1595
medlar1597
occupant1598
Paphian1598
Winchester goose1598
pagan1600
hell-moth1602
aunt1604
moll1604
prostitution1605
community1606
miss1606
night-worm1606
bat1607
croshabell1607
prostitute1607
pug1607
venturer1607
nag1608
curtal1611
jumbler1611
land-frigate1611
walk-street1611
doll-common1612
turn-up1612
barber's chaira1616
commonera1616
public commonera1616
trader1615
venturea1616
stewpot1616
tweak1617
carry-knave1623
prostibule1623
fling-dusta1625
mar-taila1625
night-shadea1625
waistcoateera1625
night trader1630
coolera1632
meretrician1631
painted ladya1637
treadle1638
buttock1641
night-walker1648
mob?1650
lady (also girl, etc.) of the game1651
lady of pleasure1652
trugmullion1654
fallen woman1659
girlc1662
high-flyer1663
fireship1665
quaedama1670
small girl1671
visor-mask1672
vizard-mask1672
bulker1673
marmalade-madam1674
town miss1675
town woman1675
lady of the night1677
mawks1677
fling-stink1679
Whetstone whore1684
man-leech1687
nocturnal1693
hack1699
strum1699
fille de joie1705
market-dame1706
screw1725
girl of (the) town1733
Cytherean1751
street girl1764
monnisher1765
lady of easy virtue1766
woman (also lady) of the town1766
kennel-nymph1771
chicken1782
stargazer1785
loose fish1809
receiver general1811
Cyprian1819
mollya1822
dolly-mop1834
hooker1845
charver1846
tail1846
horse-breaker1861
professional1862
flagger1865
cocodette1867
cocotte1867
queen's woman1871
common prostitute1875
joro1884
geisha1887
horizontal1888
flossy1893
moth1896
girl of the pavement1900
pross1902
prossie1902
pusher1902
split-arse mechanic1903
broad1914
shawl1922
bum1923
quiff1923
hustler1924
lady of the evening1924
prostie1926
working girl1928
prostisciutto1930
maggie1932
brass1934
brass nail1934
mud kicker1934
scupper1935
model1936
poule de luxe1937
pro1937
chromo1941
Tom1941
pan-pan1949
twopenny upright1958
scrubber1959
slack1959
yum-yum girl1960
Suzie Wong1962
mattress1964
jamette1965
ho1966
sex worker1971
pavement princess1976
parlour girl1979
crack whore1990
1607 T. Dekker & J. Webster West-ward Hoe ii. ii. sig. D The Lob has his Lasse,..the Westerne-man his Pug, the Seruing-man his Punke.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues at Gouge Gouge as Vouge,..a Souldiors Pug, or Punke; a Whore that followes the Camp.
1653 T. Urquhart tr. F. Rabelais 1st Bk. Wks. iii. 18 He married Gargamelle,..a jolly pug [Fr. belle gouge] and well mouthed wench.
1685 E. Morgan in N. Thompson Choice Coll. Songs (ed. 3) 323 If thy Mistress prove peevish, and will not gee, Ne'er pine..for the scornful Pug.
1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Pug, Pugnasty, a meer Pug, a nasty Slut, a sorry Jade, of a Woman.
a1708 T. Ward England's Reformation (1716) 16 Who ever knew a Royal Fancy Stoop thus to such a Pug as Nancy?
2.
a. Apparently: a ship's boy. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > one who travels by water or sea > sailor > [noun] > ship's boy
ship-boy1552
grummet1576
pug1589
1589 Skeltonicall Salutation sig. A5v Now must I call My contrymen al, And you Scotsmen tall, And Irish rugges, That were such bugges, To the Spanishe pugges, As never were seene.
1598 W. Phillip tr. J. H. van Linschoten Disc. Voy. E. & W. Indies i. xcvi. 179/2 The officers and most of the sailers were on land, none but pugs [Du. Putgers] and slaues being in the ships: for..wheresoeuer they anker, presently they goe all on land, and let the shippe lie with a boy or two in it.
a1680 S. Butler Genuine Remains (1759) I. 77 [Ulysses] ty'd his deafen'd Sailors..to the Mast,..rather venture drowning, than to wrong The Sea-pugs chaste Ears with a bawdy Song.
b. A bargeman; = Western pug at western adj., n.2, and adv. Compounds 2. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > one who travels by water or sea > sailor > types of sailor > [noun] > sailor on barge or lighter
keeler1322
lighterman1463
bargeman1465
keelman1516
wherryman1535
bark-man1588
pug1591
barger1602
western man1607
bargee1669
keel-bully1699
1591 J. Lyly Endimion iv. ii. sig. Gv In a Westerne barge, when with a good winde and lustie pugges, one may goe ten miles in two daies.
3. Formerly, in the vocabulary of servants: an upper servant in a large establishment. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > subjection > service > servant > personal or domestic servant > domestic servant > [noun] > senior
pug1847
1847 J. O. Halliwell Dict. Archaic & Provinc. Words II. (at cited word) In large families, the under-servants call the upper ones pugs, and the housekeeper's room is known as pugs'-hole.
1860 Athenæum 17 Nov. 664 Servants have become a separate estate..with their own distinction of ranks, the ‘Pugs’ and the ‘Tags’.
1909 N.E.D. (at cited word) The stillroom-maid, coming up to Pug's Parlour for orders.
1962 E. S. Turner What Butler Saw x. 119 The upper servants..withdrew to the housekeeper's room... Procedure would vary... Thus, the roast might be ceremonially borne out ahead of the departing ‘Pugs’.
1987 A. Myers Murder in Pug's Parlour i. 16 Pug's Parlour, as the head servant's room was always known.
II. A dwarf animal, an imp, etc.
4.
a. English regional. Any of various animals, as a hare, a squirrel, a ferret, a young salmon. Also used as a proper name for one or other of them. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1587 W. Harrison Hist. Descr. Iland Brit. (new ed.) iii. iii. 224/1 in Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) I A salmon is the first yeare a grauellin, and commonlie so big as an herring, the second a salmon peale, the third a pug, and the fourth a salmon.
1685 N. Tate Cuckolds-Haven i. ii. 5 Dear delicate Madam, I am your little Paraquit, your Sparrow, your Shock, your Pugg, your Squirrel.
1777–8 R. Wight Horæ Subsecivæ (MS Bodl. Eng. lang. d.66) 342 [Devon] A Pugsalmo minor, a young salmon.
1790 A. Francis Misc. Poems 227 Present thy hand of snow, And let my raptured Squirrel play—On that soft palm..: For who that lovely hand can view..And not, with Pug, delight to press A hand so beaut'ous, and so sweet?
1895 P. H. Emerson Birds, Beasts, Fishes Norfolk 363 Stoats sometimes chase them, but ‘pug’ generally manages to escape.
b. A sheep in its second year. Cf. teg n.1 1a. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > genus Ovus > [noun] > Ovus Aries (domestic sheep) > female > in first or second year
gimmer1424
theave1465
pug1610
ewe-teg1696
1610 in P. Buller & B. Buller Pots, Platters & Ploughs (1982) 93 Item Two Rammes two Ewes two puggs and five lambes.
1736 W. Ellis New Exper. Husbandry 52 The first Year we call the Ewe a Lamb; the second Year a Ewe Pug, or Teg; the third Year, a Thaive, and the fourth Year a Sheep.
1808 T. Batchelor Gen. View Agric. County of Bedford 541 The loss of weight by feeding [sheep] (tegs or pugs) on turnips, is remarkable.
1851 T. Sternberg Dial. & Folk-lore Northants. i. 83 Pug, a sheep of half a year's growth.
c. A name for a: fox. Cf. Reynard n. 1 Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Canidae > [noun] > genus Vulpes > vulpes vulpes (fox)
foxc825
toda1200
Reynardc1400
laurence?a1500
lowrie?a1500
tod lowrie?a1500
fleck1567
pug1812
puggy1827
Charley1857
red fox1875
alopecoid1880
redskin1905
1812 M. Edgeworth Absentee viii, in Tales Fashionable Life VI. 93 There is a dead silence, till pug is well out of cover, and the whole pack well in.
1858 R. S. Surtees Ask Mamma xv Pug..turns tail, and is very soon in the rear of the hounds.
1896 C. Mordaunt & W. R. Verney Ann. Warwicks. Hunt I. 252 Pug here made for another point.
5.
a. A monkey, an ape. Also applied (like ‘monkey’) to a child. Obsolete.In quot. 1598 perhaps simply ‘a plaything, a pet’: cf. sense 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > order Primates > suborder Anthropoidea (higher primates) > [noun] > monkey
apea700
mercat1481
jackanapesa1529
monkey1530
pug1598
puggy1662
meerkat1801
monkey-man1819
monk1841
simian1861
Moloch1929
1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes Marzucco, a nickname for..a munkie or pug.
1648 D. Lloyd Legend Capt. Iones Continued 23 To negotiate Commerce betweene the Æthiop and our State, For..Apes and Baboones and Pugges to please our wives.
1754 S. Richardson Hist. Sir Charles Grandison VII. xliii. 211 Take away the pug, said I, to the attendants... They rescued the still smiling babe.
1759 D. Mallet Wks. (new ed.) I. 58 Those Jack-puddings, pug and parret.
1802 F. O'Neill Poet. Ess. 17 I'll..teach him to grin like a pug, When he shew'd all his black rotton grinders.
1817 Carlop Green in R. Brown Comic Poems 132 Pugs, bears, and dancan' dogs, And raree-showers.
b. As a proper or generic name for an ape (cf. Jacko, Jackanapes, etc.). Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1653 in J. Bulwer Anthropometamorphosis (rev. ed.) sig. **1v Others are Ape-nos'd, which (old Pug) the Nurse, Intending an amendment, did make worse.]
1671 Westm.-drollery 118 Well fare poor Pug, For he plays with his Clog;..he hugs it and tugs it as a Man does his Wife.
1698 J. Crull Antient & Present State Muscovy I. 322 The Monkey by chance came jumping out with them... Poor Pug was had before his betters.
1712 J. Addison Spectator No. 499. ¶4 I heard her call him dear Pugg, and found him to be her Favourite Monkey.
1733 A. Pope 1st Satire of 2nd Bk. Horace 13 Its proper Pow'r to hurt, each Creature feels,..'Tis a Bear's talent not to Kick, but hug, And no man wonders he's not stung by Pug.
1815 Zeluca II. 218 Pug was on my shoulder.
1863 J. P. Robson Songs Bards of Tyne 64 As regard poor pug aw've had my say.
6. A small demon or imp; a sprite; a puck (puck n.1). Obsolete.Coinciding in sense with puck n.1, but probably not a variant of that word: see note in etymology.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > fairy or elf > [noun] > imp, goblin, or hobgoblin
thursec725
puckOE
puckleOE
goblina1350
hurlewaynes kin1399
Hoba1500
bogle?1507
chimera?1521
hobgoblin1530
chyppynutie?1553
bearbug1560
boggard1570
bugbear?c1570
empusa1572
puckerelc1580
puck bug1582
imp1584
urchin1584
fear-babea1586
hob-thrush1590
hodge-poker1598
lar1598
poker1598
bogle-bo1603
mormo1605
foliot1621
mormolukee1624
buggle-boo1625
pug1631
black man1656
feind1659
Tom Poker1673
duende1691
boodie?a1700
worricow1711
bolly1724
Tom Po1744
fleying1811
pooka1824
booger1827
alp1828
boll1847
bogy1857
beastie1867
boogie1880
shag boy1882
1631 B. Jonson Divell is Asse Dram. Pers., in Wks. II Satan. The great diuell. Pvg. The lesse diuell.
1635 T. Heywood Hierarchie Blessed Angells ix. 574 Diuels in Sarmatia honored, Call'd Kottri, or Kibaldi; such as wee Pugs and Hob-goblins call.
1678 S. Butler Hudibras: Third Pt. iii. i. 82 This is your Business Good Pug Robin, And your Diversion, dull Dry Bobbing: T'entice Fanaticks in the Dirt.
1710 Don Francisco Sutorioso 17 [He] swore, She was so ugly, He'd rather with the Devil's Pug lye.
1822 W. Irving Bracebridge Hall (1823) II. 163 Those sprites which Heywood in his Hierarchie calls pugs or hobgoblins.]
7. More fully pug hood. Apparently: a ladies' hood, or hood with short cape attached, fashionable around the middle of the 18th cent. Now historical. N. E. D. (1909) defines this as in Planché (quot. 1876) and adds: ‘Doubtful sense: in quot. cited (sc. 1740) it may mean a pug-dog’. More recent research on the history of costume confirms the likely existence of such a garment.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > headgear > [noun] > hood > for woman
hoodc1430
rayonnéa1685
pug1740
1740 L. Whyte Poems 63 The Cape..now is grown a demi-cloke,..To keep the Hero warm and snug, As any lady's velvet Pug.
1876 J. R. Planché Cycl. Costume I. 407 Pug, a short cloak worn by ladies about the middle of the last century.
1903 A. M. Earle Two Cent. Costume in Amer. I. viii. 253 In 1737 ‘pug hoods’ were in fashion. We have no proof of their shape, though I am told they were the close, plain, silk hood sometimes worn under other hoods.
1957 M. B. Picken Fashion Dict. 381/1 Pug,..short cape with hood attached; usually made of silk, velvet, or other rich fabric.
1975 C. Calasibetta Fairchild's Dict. Fashion 415/1 Pug hood, woman's soft hood with pleats radiating from back where it fitted the head, with or without attached cape,..worn in 18th century.
8. More fully pug dog. A breed of small dog with a stocky body and a flattened wrinkled muzzle, frequently kept as a house pet or lap dog; an animal of this breed. Also: this animal represented in porcelain, etc.There may be some connection with sense 1; cf. quot. 16112 at sense 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Canidae > other types of dog > [noun] > toy > pug-dog
pug1749
pug-slut1817
mops1890
1702 Inscription on Gravestone of Dutch Mastiff at Dunham Massey, Cheshire Pugg, alias Old Vertue.
1731 N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict. (ed. 5) Pug, a Nickname for a Monkey, or Dog.]
1749 D. Garrick Lethe 22 A fine Lady..keeps a Pug-dog, and hates the Parsons.
1789 H. L. Piozzi Observ. Journey France I. 148 The little pug dog or Dutch mastiff has quitted London for Padua, I perceive...Every carriage I meet here has a pug in it.
1821 Joseph the Book-man 133 My Lady, in her parlour snug, Is still delighted with her pug.
1851 D. Jerrold St. Giles & St. James (new ed.) ii, in Writings I. 11 You'll be thinking of keeping pug-dogs and parrots next.
1915 V. Woolf Voy. Out ii. 26 Strange ornaments to bring on a sea-voyage—china pugs, tea-sets in miniature [etc.].
1963 Times 21 May 5/2 A Chelsea pugdog scent bottle, 650gns.
2005 ‘Belle De Jour’ Intimate Adventures of London Call Girl 90 A man walking two dogs—one huge rottweiler, one tiny pug.
9. Any of numerous small geometrid moths of the genus Eupithecia and related genera, which rest with the wings stretched out to the sides. Also pug moth. Usually with distinguishing word. juniper, satin-pug, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > Heterocera > [noun] > family Geometridae > member of genus Eupitheca (pug)
pug1819
V-pug1832
1819 G. Samouelle Entomologist's Compend. 363 Geometra rufifasciata. The red-barred Pug.
1832 J. Rennie Conspectus Butterflies & Moths Brit. 132 The Beautiful Pug... The Green Pug... The Brass Pug.
1869 E. Newman Illustr. Nat. Hist. Brit. Moths 116/2 The little moths which constitute the genus Eupithecia, or, as called by collectors, ‘Pugs’.
1908 R. South Moths Brit. Isles II. 253 Bilberry Pug (Chloroclystis debiliata). As a British insect, this species..was first found in Devonshire, and was then known by the English name of ‘The Devon Pug’.
1958 W. J. Stokoe Caterpillars Brit. Moths (rev. ed.) II. 120 The Lime-speck Pug... This moth is widely distributed over the British Isles.
1995 Jrnl. Ecol. 83 165/2 (table) Eupithecia exiguata (Hübner): Mottled pug, phytophagous, on leaves.
10.
a. British regional. Applied to any person or thing that is squat or stumpy. rare.
ΚΠ
1837 J. F. Palmer Gloss. in M. Palmer Dialogue Devonshire Dial. (at cited word) Pug..is used for anything short, thick and irregularly orbicular; thus Pug-faced, Pug-nosed [etc.].
1957 Banff Advertiser 24 Oct. Fit aboot scuttlin' yer aul' pyoug [sc. an old steamboat], Peter, an' gettin' the insurance?
b. Chiefly U.S. regional. A knot or bun of hair; (also occasionally) a net, cloth, or snood for holding this in place.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > beautification of the person > beautification of the hair > accessories worn in the hair > [noun] > net or guard
hair-guard1864
pug1866
fringe-net1899
shingle cap1926
1866 Ohio Farmer 15 Dec. 400/3 Her reddish hair was fastened in a pug behind and well adorned with the tail feathers of the defunct rooster before mentioned.
1875 E. King Great South 482 They were neatly dressed in homemade clothes, and their hair was combed straight down over their cheeks and knotted into ‘pugs’ behind.
1927 Blackwood's Mag. June 747/1 His hair tied in a knot in a little red cloth or pug, on the top of his head.
1967 E. B. Nickerson Kayaks to Arctic x. 92 I had been wearing my hair in a long braid but tonight I coiled and netted it in a pug.
1986 L. Erdrich Beet Queen xiii. 263 We're getting old. Mary's hair has grayed to the color of a mouse, and she wears it pinned just over her ears in two pugs.
11. More fully pug-engine. A small locomotive used chiefly for shunting; a contractor's engine.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > rail travel > rolling stock > [noun] > locomotive > steam locomotive > used for shunting
pony engine1864
pug1872
switching-engine or -locomotive1875
switcher1882
switch-engine1896
1872 Times 18 Dec. 5/4 The 3 o'clock train from Airdrie to Glasgow..came into collision with a train of waggons drawn by a pug engine.
1893 W. Aitken Rodgerson's Doug in Echoes from Iron Road 156 No a shift of the waggons, or shunt with the pug.
1901 Daily Express 28 Aug. 6/3 While twenty navvies were returning home on a pug engine..the engine overturned at a curve on the line and fell down the embankment.
1965 H. Sheppard Dict. Railway Slang 9 Pug, Lancashire and Yorkshire 0-4-0 dock saddle tank.
1987 Railway Mag. Nov. 726/1 Of memory, too, is Glengarnock Steel Works, where ‘pugs’ shunted..while the wagon works at Barassie is also long gone.
c1992 W. Roberton (title) Scottish colliery pugs in the seventies; the last decade of steam in the Scottish coalfields.

Compounds

C1.
pug-bitch n.
ΚΠ
1796 Times 9 May 1/2 Italian pug bitch, answers to the name of Cloe.
1896 Amer. Naturalist 30 839 The case of a pug bitch, which had a mongrel litter by a Skye terrior.
1916 E. Pound Lustra 111 Quite plump, with pug-bitch features.
2004 Evening Gaz. (Nexis) 9 Dec. 4 Not only was Karen's car stolen but also their ten-month-old pet pug bitch.
pug-ugly adj.
ΚΠ
1911 Lima (Ohio) Daily News 6 Mar. 2/5 The rag-shag, pug-ugly hoboes overrun the community.
1997 Total Film Sept. 29/2 He punched the daylights out of ET's pug ugly brud in Independence Day's defining moment.
C2.
pug-face n. a face similar to that of a monkey or pug dog; a squat, flat-nosed face.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > external parts of body > head > face > types of face > [noun]
muskin1530
vizard1568
monkey-face?1589
chitty-face1601
angel face1605
smock-face1605
fish-facea1625
platter face1631
ammunition face1649
horn-facea1668
baby facea1684
crab face1706
hatchet face1707
splatter-face1707
paddock-face1724
pudding face1748
dough face1755
Madonna face1790
company face1798
moon-face1822
pug-facea1845
puss1844
frog-face1872
bun-face1913
bitch face1969
a1845 T. Hood Choice Wks. (1854) II. 190 A round, goggle-eyed pug-face, supported by..the forelimbs of a long, pampered, sausage-like body.
1897 Dublin Rev. Oct. 311 The natives grinning with delight at the sight of their pug-faces in the mirror.
1989 ‘C. Roman’ Foreplay x. 120 Simon gives her a malicious grin,..whisking the curtain closed in her peeping pugface.
pug-faced adj. that has a squat, flat-nosed face.
ΚΠ
1817 W. Hazlitt Round Table I. xii. 91 The young Lady coloured like a rose, dandling her little, black, pug-faced, white-teethed, chuckling favourite.
1926 D. H. Lawrence Plumed Serpent v. 92 The pug-faced Mexican in charge.
1998 ‘M. Manson’ & N. Strauss Marilyn Manson xii. 192 A pug-faced, inbred-looking bartender.
pug fox n. rare a supposed small variety of the red fox.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Canidae > [noun] > genus Vulpes > vulpes vulpes (fox) > varieties of
colfoxc1386
crucigeran fox1607
greyhound fox1766
mastiff fox1766
cross-fox1830
patch fox1836
brant-fox1864
pug fox1907
1907 Westm. Gaz. 9 Dec. 10/1 The importers have..brought over many pug foxes, small-sized animals with too great a love for life underground ever to lead hounds far across country.
pug peal n. Obsolete a young migrating salmon or sea trout; = peal n.2
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Salmoniformes (salmon or trout) > family Salmonidae (salmon) > [noun] > genus Salmo > salmo salar (salmon) > on return from sea or in first year
grilse1417
peal1533
botchera1609
blue cap1677
grey1677
pug peal1861
grayling1879
1861 Act 24 & 25 Victoria c. 109 §4 All migratory fish of the genus salmon, whether known by the names..salmon..peal, herring peal, may peal, pugg peal,..or by any other local name.
pug-slut n. Obsolete rare a female pug dog.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Canidae > other types of dog > [noun] > toy > pug-dog
pug1749
pug-slut1817
mops1890
1817 Sporting Mag. 50 137 My favourite dog, a small pug-slut, about two years and a half old.
pug-trout n. Obsolete the sea trout, Salmo trutta.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Salmoniformes (salmon or trout) > family Salmonidae (salmon) > [noun] > genus Salmo > trout (unspecified and miscellaneous)
shoata1000
river trout1589
sheliscada1640
bouge1705
yellowfin1771
gillaroo1773
gizzard-trout1773
whiting1792
orange-fin1834
pug-trout1865
1865 J. Couch Hist. Fishes Brit. Islands IV. 211 Sea Trout. Grey Trout... Pugtrout.

Derivatives

pugship n. Obsolete (with possessive adjective) the status of a pug; also as a title of mock respect for a pug.
ΚΠ
1818 Sporting Mag. 2 3 This sable livery of their pugships is not of long duration—it is merely an ornament of youth.
1896 Fitchburg (Mass.) Daily Sentinel 8 June 1/3 A pug dog decided to attend service..but the janitor thought otherwise and ejected the intruder and made a fine capture of his surprised pugship.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pugn.3

Brit. /pʌɡ/, U.S. /pəɡ/
Forms: 1800s pugg, 1800s– pug.
Origin: A borrowing from Hindi. Etymon: Hindi pag.
Etymology: < Hindi pag, ultimately < Sanskrit pādāgra < pāda leg, foot + agra end.The shortening of the vowel in Hindi may represent earlier transmission via Old Panjabi *pagg (compare informal Gujarati pāg and Old Awadhi paiga foot) or regular shortening of pretonic pāg- in derivatives and compounds, as well as avoidance of homonymy with pagg, pāg turban.
The footprint of an animal. Also more fully pug-mark.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > animals hunted > trail > [noun] > foot-print
pointingc1425
sealing1591
seal1686
pad1791
pug1851
pad mark1900
1851 Fraser's Mag. July 19/2 There were the broad, deep puggs of a tiger, up and down the nullah.
1865 Daily Tel. 12 Dec. 7/3 There are not many sensations worth getting up for so early..; but to see the first ‘pug’ of the tiger's track on the wet path is one of them.
1889 R. S. S. Baden-Powell Pigsticking 55 The goat has a square pug with blunt points to his toes.
1909 Westm. Gaz. 6 Mar. 14/3 Where the pugs are once more visible in the sheltered snow they are fresh and clear.
1922 Chambers's Jrnl. Dec. 860/1 I found a good many pug-marks and from them I concluded that the man-eater was a smallish beast.
1946 J. Corbett Man-eaters of Kumaon 8 Entering the ravine..I found the pug marks of a tiger in some fine earth..; these pug marks showed the animal to be a tigress, a little past her prime.
1992 N. Gordimer Spoils in Jump & Other Stories (1992) 174 Distinct pugs are found in the dust that surrounds the small swimming-pool.
2004 R. Stewart Places in Between (2006) 177 Among the pugmarks, footprints, and hoof blows on the pale track, melting snow had left patches of dark, glutinous mud.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pugn.4

Brit. /pʌɡ/, U.S. /pəɡ/
Origin: Of uncertain origin.
Etymology: Origin uncertain; apparently related to pug v.2 (compare senses 2 and 4 at that entry). Compare earlier pug mill n., pugging n.1 1, pug cylinder n.In sense 2 apparently short for pug mill n.
1. Clay or loam that has been pulverized, thoroughly mixed, and kneaded into a soft, plastic condition without air pockets for brickmaking, pottery, etc.; any earth or other material having a similar consistency or use, esp. (Australian) auriferous clay.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > clay compositions > [noun] > with water
loam1480
clama1555
slip1640
puddle1791
puddling1826
slop1844
pug1853
1853 W. D. Cooper Gloss. Provincialisms Sussex (ed. 2) 67 Pug, a kind of loam.
1866 H. W. Lord Rep. Brickfields in 5th Rep. Children's Employment Comm. 143/1 in Parl. Papers (3678) XXIV. 169/1 A brickfield certainly is not the place for girls... The work they have too, at least those who are pug-bearers, often causes indecency; they have to stoop down to the ground to pick the pug up from the bottom of the mill.
1872 Mrs. Millet Parsonage iii. 55 The walls of the house were built of ‘pug’, which means simply well-pounded mud.
1876 S. Wood Good Gardening (ed. 2) 41 Form this compound into a very stout pug or mortar by chopping, treading, &c.
1896 E. Dyson Rhymes from Mines 66 To puddle off the pug and clay And pan the gleaming prospect bare.
1935 Discovery June 174/2 The wall being filled with any material available, possibly that mixture of soil and small stones which is known as ‘pug’ in some parts of Essex.
1941 D. O'Callaghan Long Life Reminisc. 107 The valley was more like a Kaline pug lead. The gold was mostly in the pug and was very fine.
1977 Oxf. Mission Q. Paper Jan.–Mar. 14 The foot sinks ankle-deep into ghastly, evil-smelling pug if one is unlucky enough to step off the raised paths.
2006 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 22 Aug. e1 Through years of trial and error he has managed to replicate the ancient techniques for pug—a loam or clay mixture for preparing and tempering clay—and other archaic techniques for vase-making.
2. = pug mill n.In quot. 1904: the platform on which this machine stands.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > equipment for altering consistency > [noun] > crushing or grinding
mullet1398
mill1560
rammer1630
pulverizer1635
crackera1640
hand mill1656
grinder1688
mortar1733
pestle mill1773
pulverer1778
bruiser1809
smasher1822
muller1823
pug mill1824
crusher1825
pounding machine1839
pug1859
disintegrator1874
micronizer1934
1859 Times 14 July 9/6 Clay must be..wrought in the pug before it can be moulded.
a1877 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. II. 1817/2 Pug, the mill in which slip is kneaded and from which it comes in the form of bricks.
1904 A. Griffiths Fifty Years Public Service xvii. 236 When by-and-by the ‘kerf’ thus formed was to be carried on to the ‘pug’, or raised platform from which the machine was fed, it was duly cut at the bottom of the heap... I could follow the ‘kerf’ to the ‘pug’.
1969 D. Griffiths Talk of my Town 28 Pug, clay mixing and extruding machine.
2001 APT Bull. 32 13/1 The clay coming from the pug was always piled into an adjacent clay bin.

Compounds

pug-hole n. a hole from which clay used for making pug has been dug.
ΚΠ
1870 Symons Life Draper vii. 61 Bowden was a great brick-making place. Deep pits from which the clay had been excavated, known as ‘pug holes’ abounded in every direction.
2006 Advertiser (Adelaide) (Nexis) 30 Jan. 15 The excavation, refilling and compaction of former ‘pug holes’ which supplied clay for brick making in the early 1900s.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

pugn.5

Brit. /pʌɡ/, U.S. /pəɡ/
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: pugilist n.
Etymology: Shortened < pugilist n., with pronunciation corresponding to the written form.
slang.
= pugilist n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > boxing > [noun] > boxer
buffeter1483
pugil1646
cuffer1662
boxer1672
pugilistc1740
setter-to1810
miller1812
sparrer1814
pet1825
pugilistic1827
slogger1829
fist-mate1834
peeler1852
pug1858
scrapper1874
slugger1877
slogster1881
basher1882
fisticuffer1888
ring man1899
ringster1902
pucker1919
1858 A. Mayhew Paved with Gold ii. xii. 184 He was known by his brother pugs to be one of the gamest hands in the ring.
1888 ‘R. Boldrewood’ Robbery under Arms xx He was fond of talking about ‘pugs’ as he'd known intimate.
1924 J. Buchan Three Hostages v. 74 The man had been in the ring, and not so very long ago. I wondered at Medina's choice, for a pug is not the kind of servant I would choose myself.
1961 Lancet 26 Aug. 447/2 It is well known that boxers, including fair-ground-booth pugs, can tolerate severe direct blows to the head.
1977 Time 19 Dec. 68/2 Hemingway had gone many rounds with pugs, and Journalist Paul Gallico once had his fillings loosened by Jack Dempsey.
2006 Times (Nexis) 4 Oct. (Sport section) 80 Rocky, the fictional, washed-up pug who became world heavyweight champion and turned Sylvester Stallone..into a multimillionaire.

Compounds

pug-glove n. rare a boxing glove.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > boxing > [noun] > boxing-glove
muffle1747
muffler1747
boxing glove1780
glove1847
mitt1877
pillow1882
pug-glove1938
1938 D. Thomas Let. 1 June in Sel. Lett. (1966) 198 ‘Boxed’ has the coffin and the pug-glove in it.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

pugv.1

Brit. /pʌɡ/, U.S. /pəɡ/, Scottish English /pʌɡ/, Welsh English /pəɡ/
Origin: Of unknown origin.
Etymology: Origin unknown.In sense 2 perhaps influenced by pug v.2, pug n.4, or puggy adj.2
Now English regional (western), Welsh English, and Scottish.
1. transitive. To pull, tug (something). Also intransitive: to pull or tug at.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impelling or driving > pushing and pulling > push and pull [verb (transitive)] > pull > exert pulling force on or pull at
pullOE
beteec1275
tug13..
tucka1400
ruga1425
pug1575
haul1743
the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > cultivation of plants or crops > picking or gathering > pick or gather [verb (transitive)]
pullc1350
cropc1450
tuck1625
pug1717
1575 R. B. Apius & Virginia sig. Biv What tugging? what lugging? what pugging by the eare.
1655 Dunferm. Kirk S. 44 Marione Broune..deponit that Iohn Kellek, ruggit and puggit hir beneath the spittell-brig.
1717 T. Marchant Diary 30 Mar. in Sussex Archaeol. Coll. (1873) 25 180 George pugg'd clover in the forenoon.
1790 F. Grose Provinc. Gloss. (ed. 2) Pug, to pull. Worcestersh.
1862 St. Andrews Gaz. 25 July in Sc. National Dict. A the weans ruggin' an' puggin' at his pouches for fairins an' sweeties.
1875 S. Beauchamp N. Hamilton II. 17 So they'n pug the ropes a good un for a pale [peal].
1882 E. L. Chamberlain Gloss. W. Worcs. Words (at cited word) The master's pugged Johnny's ears.
1890 J. D. Robertson Gloss. Words County of Gloucester (at cited word) I was atop o' the rick puggin' out handfuls where it was wet.
1974 W. Leeds Herefordshire Speech 90 Pug, to tug or pull (especially of hair).
2. transitive. To dirty by too much handling. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1885 E. C. Sharland Ways & Means in Devonshire Village iv. 55 To learn to handle things without pugging and pawing them.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

pugv.2

Brit. /pʌɡ/, U.S. /pəɡ/
Origin: Of uncertain origin.
Etymology: Origin uncertain; perhaps compare Dutch regional (southern) puggen to hit hard, to hit with force (perhaps ultimately imitative); alternatively, perhaps compare poke v.1 Compare slightly earlier pugging n.1 and later pug n.4 and pug mill n.It is not entirely certain that the three sense branches all show the same word. For the association with clay (compare branch III.), perhaps compare puggy adj.2
I. To hit or poke.
1. transitive. To poke, punch, strike. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > strike [verb (transitive)]
swingc725
slayc825
knockc1000
platOE
swengea1225
swipa1225
kill?c1225
girdc1275
hitc1275
befta1300
anhitc1300
frapa1330
lushc1330
reddec1330
takec1330
popc1390
swapa1400
jod?14..
quella1425
suffetc1440
smith1451
nolpc1540
bedunch1567
percuss1575
noba1586
affrap1590
cuff?1611
doda1661
buffa1796
pug1802
nob1811
scud1814
bunt1825
belt1838
duntle1850
punt1886
plunk1888
potch1892
to stick one on1910
clunk1943
zonk1950
1802 ‘P. Pindar’ Middlesex Election i. 17 I'd quickly pug their guts.
1863 W. Barnes Gloss. Dorset Dial. (1886) Pug, to..poke.
1906 Notes & Queries 29 Dec. 517/1 Eighteen or nineteen years ago, I used to hear a rather quarrelsome schoolboy at Swansea make use of the expression ‘I'll give you a pugging!’ or ‘I'll pug you!’ where ‘pugging’ and ‘pug’ were exactly equivalent to ‘punching’ and ‘punch’. I do not know what part of the country this boy came from, but I know that he was not Welsh.
II. To pack in or fill up.
2. transitive. To pack or fill up (a space) with pug, cement, etc.; esp. to pack (the space between floor joists) with earth, sawdust, or some other material to provide fireproofing, sound insulation, etc. Cf. pugging n.1 1.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > inaudibility > sound-proofing or conditioning > sound-proof [verb (transitive)] > a floor
pug1820
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > surfacing or cladding > clad or cover [verb (transitive)] > fill in gaps
stop1388
beamfill1469
stuff1601
caulk1616
run1657
strike1668
fog1678
chinse1770
sneck1792
darn1801
pug1820
chink1822
grout1838
fillet1843
gallet1851
slush1875
putty1879
spackle1950
1820 Daily National Intelligencer (Washington) 3 Jan. [At the White House in Washington] the garret and second story floors have been laid of best 5/4 heart pine, and the whole of these stories counter-floored and pugged, to guard against fire.
1870 Eng. Mech. 28 Jan. 488/1 Will any kind reader inform me of a material that will answer all the purposes of pugging floors?
1880 Libr. Universal Knowl. V. 876 Wood, well pugged with cement, is strongly recommended by many architects..for girders and beams.
1906 Pall Mall Gaz. 19 Mar. 2/3 Residents in semi-detached villas with the usual slender walls, or even in flats with the floors warranted duly ‘pugged’.
1999 M. Talbot-Smith Audio Engineer's Ref. Bk. (ed. 2) 2-35/2 If the ducts have to take direct routes then they must be pugged with material similar in density to the partition.
3. transitive. English regional. To thrust, poke, or pack into a small space. Also intransitive. Now rare.
ΚΠ
1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words II. 415 ‘That small house is pugged in between two high ones.’
1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words II. 415 ‘The two families live pugging together.’
1888 F. T. Elworthy W. Somerset Word-bk. at Pugged up Jim and his wive and vower chil'ern a-pugged up in thick there little bit of a house.
III. To squeeze or compact.
4.
a. transitive. To prepare (clay) for brickmaking, pottery, etc., by kneading and working it into a soft, plastic condition without air pockets, as in a pug mill. Cf. pug n.4Originally done by treading and stamping with the feet, which was probably the earliest ‘pugging’: cf. A. Ure Dict. Arts (1839) 184 ‘The next step is to temper the clay, which is generally done by the treading of men or oxen. In the neighbourhood of London, however, this process is performed in a horse-mill. The kneading of the clay is..the most laborious but indispensable part of the whole business [of brickmaking]... The more it is worked, the denser, more uniform, and more durable, the bricks which are made of it.’
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > working with specific materials > working with clay > work with clay [verb (transitive)] > specific processes
weather1548
wedge1686
tamper1766
puddle1774
pug1843
size1889
1843 Mechanics' Mag. 39 193 The most useful properties of ‘ciment’, when well pugged or kneaded with the clay, was to hasten the drying, and to diminish the contraction.
1884 C. G. W. Lock Workshop Receipts 3rd Ser. 105 The compound was pugged, moulded, and strongly pressed.
1968 Art Educ. 21 v. 27/2 The clay for such a large pot..should not be machine blended and pugged.
1983 K. Clark Potter's Man. i. 11 If a natural local clay is being used, alone or with dry ingredients, it should be filter-pressed to clean it thoroughly and then pugged before storing.
1993 Newsline for Wedgwood Group (BNC) Feb. 6 (caption) Kelvin Pearson with a pug mill which drives air bubbles from the filter, pugs clay and kneads it to make it malleable.
b. transitive. To trample or tread (ground) into a muddy and sticky mass, as is done by cattle near gates or drinking-places; = poach v.2 5a. Also with up. rare (chiefly Australian and New Zealand).
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > impact > striking > striking with specific thing > strike with specific thing [verb (transitive)] > with the foot > downwards > trample > specific ground or turf
poach1677
pug1881
1881 [implied in: Daily News 4 June 5/5 The pugged and sticky sheep-folds could not be brought by plough and harrow into anything like suitable mould. (at pugged adj.1)].
1964 [implied in: Ann. Assoc. Amer. Geographers 54 74/1 New Zealand's rain soaked pastures, which suffer from pugging and ‘poaching’. (at pugging n.1 3)].
1995 Weekly Times (Austral.) (Nexis) 16 Aug. Saturated soils in the Lang Lang district have resulted in cows pugging them up so bad, there is no grass.
2004 N. Z. Press Assoc. (Nexis) 21 Sept. Ground cover had been damaged through cows pugging sodden soil.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

pugv.3

Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: pug n.3
Etymology: < pug n.3 Compare earlier pugging n.3
Anglo-Indian. Obsolete. rare.
transitive. To track (an animal or person) by following footprints. Also intransitive.
ΚΠ
1889 R. S. S. Baden-Powell Pigsticking 57 We called up the head~man of the beat and asked him if he could pug...‘Of course I can pug. My work is pugging criminals.’
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2007; most recently modified version published online September 2018).
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