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单词 tog
释义

togn.1

Brit. /tɒɡ/, U.S. /tɑɡ/
Forms: Usually plural togs.
Etymology: apparently a shortening of togeman n., used in Vagabonds' Cant as early as the 16th cent. Its currency in the 19th cent. was no doubt aided by its obvious connection with toga n.; compare toge n.
slang or colloquial.
1. Cant and slang. A coat; any outer garment; see also quot. 1809.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > outerwear > [noun] > article of
overclothc1390
hulling1434
overgarmenta1470
outsides1631
overall1631
supervesture1648
tog1708
supervestment1865
Montenegrin1890
outer1904
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > [noun] > coat
coatc1300
tog1708
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > games of chance > [noun] > gaming cloth
tog1809
1708 Mem. John Hall 10 Togge, a Coat.
1718 C. Hitchin Regulator 20 The names of the Flash Words now in Vogue amongst Thieves... Togge, alias Coat.
1755 J. Potts Jrnl. in R. Price Howling Arctic (1970) i. 16 Having no beaver coats in the factory to make their togs, mittens nor caps.
1798 Tufts Gloss. Thieves' Jargon (Cent. D.) Long tog, a coat.
1809 G. Andrewes Dict. Slang & Cant Langs. Tatty togg, a gaming cloth.
1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. 219 Tog, a coat.
1821 Sporting Mag. 9 27 Curtis, in a new white upper tog.
1911 19th Cent. & After Sept. 548 A tog and kicks is synonymous with a coat and breeches.
2. plural.
a. Clothes. slang and humorously colloquial.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > [noun]
clothesc888
hattersOE
shroudc1000
weedOE
shrouda1122
clothc1175
hatteringa1200
atourc1220
back-clout?c1225
habit?c1225
clothingc1275
cleadinga1300
dubbinga1300
shroudinga1300
attirec1300
coverturec1300
suitc1325
apparel1330
buskingc1330
farec1330
harness1340
tire1340
backs1341
geara1350
apparelmentc1374
attiringa1375
vesturec1385
heelinga1387
vestmentc1386
arraya1400
graitha1400
livery1399
tirementa1400
warnementa1400
arrayment1400
parelc1400
werlec1400
raiment?a1425
robinga1450
rayc1450
implements1454
willokc1460
habiliment1470
emparelc1475
atourement1481
indumenta1513
reparel1521
wearing gear1542
revesture1548
claesc1550
case1559
attirement1566
furniture1566
investuring1566
apparelling1567
dud1567
hilback1573
wear1576
dress1586
enfolding1586
caparison1589
plight1590
address1592
ward-ware1598
garnish1600
investments1600
ditement1603
dressing1603
waith1603
thing1605
vestry1606
garb1608
outwall1608
accoutrementa1610
wearing apparel1617
coutrement1621
vestament1632
vestiment1637
equipage1645
cask1646
aguise1647
back-timbera1656
investiture1660
rigging1664
drapery1686
vest1694
plumage1707
bussingc1712
hull1718
paraphernalia1736
togs1779
body clothing1802
slough1808
toggery1812
traps1813
garniture1827
body-clothes1828
garmenture1832
costume1838
fig1839
outfit1840
vestiture1841
outer womana1845
outward man1846
vestiary1846
rag1855
drag1870
clo'1874
parapherna1876
clobber1879
threads1926
mocker1939
schmatte1959
vine1959
kit1989
1779 J. Wedgwood Let. 9 May in Sel. Lett. (1965) 233 He determined to strip off his waistcoat, and put on the togs at once.
1790 H. T. Potter Dict. Cant & Flash Lang. Toges or toggs, cloaths for both sexes.
1809 G. Andrewes Dict. Slang & Cant Langs. Toggs, clothes.
1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. 219 Togs or Toggery, wearing apparel in general.
1838 C. Dickens Oliver Twist I. xvi. 257 ‘Look at his togs, Fagin!’ said Charley... ‘Look at his togs!—superfine cloth, and the heavy-swell cut!’
b. Variously qualified: often humorous or depreciative; long togs (Nautical), landsmen's clothes.
ΚΠ
1830 F. Marryat King's Own I. x. 152 I retained a suit of ‘long togs’, as we call them.
1840 R. H. Dana Two Years before Mast xxviii. 96 His ‘long togs’, the half-pay, his beaver hat, white linen shirts, and everything else.
1850 F. E. Smedley Frank Fairlegh iv. 34 I should have thought he had seen the sporting togs.
1860 All Year Round 28 July 380 Three or four days..employed by us in providing sea-going togs, and other requirements.
1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. (at cited word) Sunday togs.
c. Australian and New Zealand colloquial. A swimming costume.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > [noun] > for specific purpose > swimming or bathing
bathing-dress1774
bathing-costume?a1832
costume1855
suit1864
bathing-suit1873
cossie1926
swimmer1929
togs1930
Speedo1933
swimsuit1934
bathers1945
bikini1948
bikini1957
monokini1964
tankini1985
burkini2002
1930 V. Palmer Passage i. x. 83 ‘You nip in and get my togs.’.. He was much more at ease in his bathing~trunks than in his..suit and slippery shoes.
1935 ‘J. Guthrie’ Little Country xiii. 216 We..tore down to a quiet beach, stripped off our clothes, and plunged in... We didn't bother about togs.
1944 G. Texidor in D. M. Davin N.Z. Short Stories (1953) 313 Mum came over and said..they could put on their togs. But they mustn't stay in for long, it was getting chilly.
1959 M. Shadbolt New Zealanders 96 ‘I forgot my togs. I left them at the other place.’ ‘Never mind, you can swim in your shorts, can't you?’
1971 N.Z. Listener 15 Feb. 14/5 ‘I haven't got a costume.’..‘Go back and get your togs.’
3. A unit of thermal resistance used to express the insulating properties of clothes and quilts (see quots. 1945, 1978); so tog rating, tog value. [Modelled on the earlier U.S. term clo.]
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > properties of materials > temperature > heat > [noun] > measurement of heat > unit of thermal resistance
tog1945
1945 Peirce & Rees in Shirley Inst. Mem. XIX. 343 So that practical clothing may be described conveniently by a range of small integers, the unit of thermal resistance, to be called the ‘tog’, is the resistance that will maintain a temperature difference of 0·1°C. with a flux of 1 watt per square metre, or in more practical terms, 10°C. with a flux of 1 watt per square decimetre. This is the resistance of a light summer suit, and 10 togs represents about the thickest clothing..practicable to wear.
1975 Daily Tel. 9 Dec. 13/4 White goose down: 10·5 togs (which means that it is extra-warm and light)... Terylene P.3: 8·5 to 9 togs (normal warmth). The heaviest quilt, I am told, gives the same tog warmth as five blankets at less than half the weight.
1977 Observer 25 Sept. (Colour Suppl.) 60/1 (advt.) Genuine continental quilt luxury at bargain prices: Tog rating (warmth factor) 9·5+.
1978 Textiles VII. ii. 50/2 The tog value of a textile is equal to ten times the temperature difference between its two faces when the flow of heat is equal to one watt per square metre. One tog is the thermal resistance of a fabric for a conventional man's suiting or of a blanket of medium quality.

Compounds

tog-maker n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > [noun] > tailor
seamsterc995
tailor1297
parnterc1400
parmenterc1450
pricklouse?a1513
Tom Tailor1575
stitcher1589
scissor man1593
cutter1599
snip1600
snipper1611
shred1616
needleman1621
fashioner1631
snip-snappera1632
sartor1656
nipshred1661
stult1675
cabbage1694
linen-armourer1699
stitch1699
snip-cabbage1708
tire-man1709
knight of the needlea1777
stay-tape1785
schneider1796
needle-jerker1801
skip-louse1807
darzi1809
cross-legs1823
tog-maker1901
knight of the shears-
1901 Daily Tel. 16 Apr. 5/2 Describing himself as a ‘tog-maker’, with no fixed abode.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

togn.2

Brit. /tɒɡ/, U.S. /tɑɡ/
Origin: A variant or alteration of another lexical item. Etymon: teg n.1
Etymology: Variant of teg n.1, perhaps partly after hog n.1 (compare branch II. at that entry).
dialect.
= teg n.1 1a.
ΚΠ
1851 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 12 ii. 333 A lamb eight or nine months old, and until his first shearing, is called a ‘heder’ or ‘sheder’, ‘hog’, ‘hogget’, or ‘lamb-hog’. In other counties a ‘teg’, ‘tog’, ‘gimmer’, and ‘dinmont’, &c.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

togv.

Brit. /tɒɡ/, U.S. /tɑɡ/
Etymology: Occurs first and chiefly as togged /tɒɡd/, probably originally < tog n.1: compare booted, hatted, etc.
a. transitive. To clothe, to dress. Const. out, up.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > providing with clothing > provide with clothing [verb (transitive)]
wrya901
clothec950
shride971
aturnc1220
begoa1225
array1297
graith1297
agraithc1300
geara1325
cleadc1325
adightc1330
apparel1362
back1362
shape1362
attirea1375
parela1375
tirea1375
rayc1390
addressa1393
coverc1394
aguisea1400
scredea1400
shrouda1400
bedightc1400
buskc1400
harnessc1400
hatterc1400
revesta1449
able1449
dressa1450
reparel?c1450
adub?1473
endue?a1475
afaite1484
revestera1500
beclothe1509
trimc1516
riga1535
invest1540
vesture1555
suit1577
clad1579
investure1582
vest1582
deck1587
habit1594
to make ready1596
caparison1597
skin1601
shadow1608
garment1614
riga1625
raiment1656
garb1673
equip1695
to fit out1722
encase1725
tog1793
trick1821
to fig out1825
enclothe1832
toilet1842
to get up1858
habilitate1885
tailor1885
kit1919
1793 European Mag. 23 466 An old fine lady..Tog'd out in each extravagance of fashion.
1811 Lexicon Balatronicum at Togs The swell is rum-togged, the gentleman is handsomely dressed.
1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. (at cited word) To tog is to dress or put on clothes; to tog a person, is also to supply them with apparel.
1823 W. Scott St. Ronan's Well I. iv. 89 He was tog'd gnostically enough.
1862 All Year Round 13 Sept. 12/1 He was togged out in first-rate style.
1894 G. A. Henty Dorothy's Double I. 202 You had better tog yourself up a bit.
1904 J. A. Riis Theodore Roosevelt xiv. 344 Mrs. Cleveland when he was Governor, togged out his staff in the most gorgeous clothes.
b. intransitive for reflexive. Also to tog it.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > providing with clothing > provide with clothing [verb (intransitive)] > in specific way > dress up
to toss out1759
to tog it1819
prig1845
to rag out1849
buck up1854
to dress up1869
poon1943
priss1971
1819 [see sense a].
1844 A. Smith Adventures Mr. Ledbury I. xvi. 222 My pardner's going to tog it.
1869 J. Greenwood Seven Curses London (Farmer) She's a dress-woman..they tog out that they may show off at their best, and make the most of their faces.
1903 ‘Marjoribanks’ Fluff-hunters 132 It was a new experience—togging up to meet a prospective landlady!
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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