释义 |
frog frogfrog F0334800 (frôg, frŏg)n.1. a. Any of numerous tailless aquatic, semiaquatic, or terrestrial amphibians of the order Anura, characteristically having a short vertebral column, a large head, long hind legs used for leaping, and a tadpole stage as larvae.b. Any of various usually aquatic members of this order having smoother skin and longer hind legs than the toads.2. A wedge-shaped, horny prominence in the sole of a horse's hoof.3. A loop fastened to a belt to hold a tool or weapon.4. An ornamental looped braid or cord with a button or knot for fastening the front of a garment.5. A device on intersecting railroad tracks that permits wheels to cross the junction.6. A spiked or perforated device used to support stems in a flower arrangement.7. The nut of a violin bow.8. Informal Hoarseness or phlegm in the throat.9. Offensive Slang Used as a disparaging term for a person of French birth or descent. [Middle English frogge, from Old English frogga.]frog (frɒɡ) n1. (Animals) any insectivorous anuran amphibian of the family Ranidae, such as Rana temporaria of Europe, having a short squat tailless body with a moist smooth skin and very long hind legs specialized for hopping2. (Animals) any of various similar amphibians of related families, such as the tree frog. 3. any spiked or perforated object used to support plant stems in a flower arrangement4. (Building) a recess in a brick to reduce its weight5. (Pathology) a frog in one's throat phlegm on the vocal cords that affects one's speechvb, frogs, frogging or frogged (Hunting) (intr) to hunt or catch frogs[Old English frogga; related to Old Norse froskr, Old High German forsk]
frog (frɒɡ) n1. (Clothing & Fashion) (often plural) a decorative fastening of looped braid or cord, as on the front of a 19th-century military uniform2. (Clothing & Fashion) a loop or other attachment on a belt to hold the scabbard of a sword, etc3. (Instruments) music a. the ledge or ridge at the upper end of the fingerboard of a violin, cello, etc, over which the strings pass to the tuning pegsb. the end of a violin bow that is held by the player. Also called (in Britain and certain other countries): nut [C18: perhaps ultimately from Latin floccus tuft of hair, flock2]
frog (frɒɡ) n (Anatomy) a tough elastic horny material in the centre of the sole of a horse's foot[C17: of uncertain origin]
frog (frɒɡ) n (Railways) a grooved plate of iron or steel placed to guide train wheels over an intersection of railway lines[C19: of uncertain origin; perhaps a special use of frog1]
Frog (frɒɡ) or Froggyn, pl Frogs or Froggiesa derogatory word for a French personfrog1 (frɒg, frɔg) n., v. frogged, frog•ging, adj. n. 1. any tailless stout-bodied amphibian of the order Anura, including the smooth, moist-skinned frog species that live in a damp or semiaquatic habitat and the warty drier-skinned toad species that are mostly terrestrial as adults. 2. Also called true frog , ranid. any frog of the widespread family Ranidae, which are mostly semiaquatic and have smooth, moist skin and long hind legs used for leaping. 3. a slight hoarseness, usu. caused by mucus on the vocal cords: a frog in the throat. 4. (often cap.) Slang: Extremely Disparaging and Offensive. (a contemptuous term used to refer to a French person or a person of French descent.) 5. a small holder made of heavy material, placed in a bowl or vase to hold flower stems in position. 6. the nut of a violin bow. v.i. 7. to hunt and catch frogs. adj. 8. (often cap.) Slang: Extremely Disparaging and Offensive. French or Frenchlike. [before 1000; Middle English frogge, Old English frogga, frocga] usage: Definitions 4 and 9 are slurs and should be avoided. These senses are used with disparaging intent and are perceived as highly insulting. frog2 (frɒg, frɔg) n. 1. an ornamental fastening for the front of a coat, consisting of a button and a loop through which it passes. 2. a sheath suspended from a belt and supporting a scabbard. [1710–20] frog3 (frɒg, frɔg) n. a device at the intersection of two railroad tracks to permit the wheels and flanges on one track to cross or branch from the other. [1840–50, Amer.; of uncertain orig.] frog4 (frɒg, frɔg) n. a triangular mass of elastic horny substance in the middle of the sole of the foot of a horse or related animal. [1600–10; compare earlier frush in same sense] frog (frôg) Any of numerous amphibians typically having smooth, moist skin, webbed feet, long hind legs used for leaping, and no tail when fully grown. Frogs mostly live in or around water, but some species, such as tree frogs, live on land. Compare toad.frog Past participle: frogged Gerund: frogging
Present |
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I frog | you frog | he/she/it frogs | we frog | you frog | they frog |
Preterite |
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I frogged | you frogged | he/she/it frogged | we frogged | you frogged | they frogged |
Present Continuous |
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I am frogging | you are frogging | he/she/it is frogging | we are frogging | you are frogging | they are frogging |
Present Perfect |
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I have frogged | you have frogged | he/she/it has frogged | we have frogged | you have frogged | they have frogged |
Past Continuous |
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I was frogging | you were frogging | he/she/it was frogging | we were frogging | you were frogging | they were frogging |
Past Perfect |
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I had frogged | you had frogged | he/she/it had frogged | we had frogged | you had frogged | they had frogged |
Future |
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I will frog | you will frog | he/she/it will frog | we will frog | you will frog | they will frog |
Future Perfect |
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I will have frogged | you will have frogged | he/she/it will have frogged | we will have frogged | you will have frogged | they will have frogged |
Future Continuous |
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I will be frogging | you will be frogging | he/she/it will be frogging | we will be frogging | you will be frogging | they will be frogging |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been frogging | you have been frogging | he/she/it has been frogging | we have been frogging | you have been frogging | they have been frogging |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been frogging | you will have been frogging | he/she/it will have been frogging | we will have been frogging | you will have been frogging | they will have been frogging |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been frogging | you had been frogging | he/she/it had been frogging | we had been frogging | you had been frogging | they had been frogging |
Conditional |
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I would frog | you would frog | he/she/it would frog | we would frog | you would frog | they would frog |
Past Conditional |
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I would have frogged | you would have frogged | he/she/it would have frogged | we would have frogged | you would have frogged | they would have frogged |
Frog1. Part of a turning plow that helps hold the landside and moldboard together.2. The central part of a horse’s hoof.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | frog - any of various tailless stout-bodied amphibians with long hind limbs for leaping; semiaquatic and terrestrial speciesanuran, batrachian, salientian, toad, toad frogamphibian - cold-blooded vertebrate typically living on land but breeding in water; aquatic larvae undergo metamorphosis into adult formranid, true frog - insectivorous usually semiaquatic web-footed amphibian with smooth moist skin and long hind legsleptodactylid, leptodactylid frog - toothed frogs: terrestrial or aquatic or arborealrobber frog - small terrestrial frog of tropical Americabarking frog, Hylactophryne augusti, robber frog - of southwest United States and Mexico; call is like a dog's barkcrapaud, Leptodactylus pentadactylus, South American bullfrog - large toothed frog of South America and Central America resembling the bullfrogtree frog, tree-frog - any of various Old World arboreal frogs distinguished from true frogs by adhesive suckers on the toesAscaphus trui, bell toad, ribbed toad, tailed frog, tailed toad - western North American frog with a taillike copulatory organLiopelma hamiltoni - primitive New Zealand frog with four unwebbed toes on forefeet and five on hind feettrue toad - tailless amphibian similar to a frog but more terrestrial and having drier warty skinAlytes obstetricans, obstetrical toad, midwife toad - European toad whose male carries the fertilized eggs wrapped around its hind legs until they hatchAlytes cisternasi, midwife toad - similar in habit to Alytes obstetriciansBombina bombina, fire-bellied toad - toad of central and eastern Europe having red or orange patches mixed with black on its undersidespadefoot, spadefoot toad - a burrowing toad of the northern hemisphere with a horny spade-like projection on each hind foottree frog, tree toad, tree-frog - arboreal amphibians usually having adhesive disks at the tip of each toe; of southeast Asia and Australia and AmericaGastrophryne olivacea, western narrow-mouthed toad - small secretive toad with smooth tough skin of central and western North Americaeastern narrow-mouthed toad, Gastrophryne carolinensis - small toad of southeastern United Statessheep frog - mostly of Central Americatongueless frog - almost completely aquatic frog native to Africa and Panama and northern South AmericaSouth American poison toad - a South American toad | | 2. | frog - a person of French descent GaulFrench person, Frenchman, Frenchwoman - a person of French nationality | | 3. | frog - a decorative loop of braid or cordadornment - a decoration of color or interest that is added to relieve plainness | Verb | 1. | frog - hunt frogs for foodcapture, catch - capture as if by hunting, snaring, or trapping; "I caught a rabbit in the trap today" |
frog nounRelated words adjective batrachian young tadpole see amphibiansTranslationsfrog (frog) noun a small jumping animal, without a tail, that lives on land and in water. 蛙 蛙ˈfrogman noun an underwater swimmer who uses breathing apparatus and flippers. 蛙人 蛙人frog See:- (as) mad as a box of frogs
- a (real) frog-choker
- a (real) frog-strangler
- a big frog in a small pond
- a frog in (one's) throat
- a frog in throat
- a frog in your throat
- a little frog in a big pond
- a small frog in a big pond
- big fish in a small pond
- big frog in a small pond
- biggest frog in the puddle
- boiling frog
- boiling frog syndrome
- finer than frog hair
- frog face
- frog in (one's) throat
- frog in a small pond
- frog in one's throat
- frog slicing
- have a frog in (one's) throat
- have a frog in your throat
- if a toady frog had wings, he wouldn't bump his ass
- If frogs had wheels, they wouldn't bump their butts
- know no more about than a frog knows about bedsheets
- like herding frogs
- little frog in a big pond
- the biggest frog in the puddle
frog
frog, common name for an amphibianamphibian, in zoology, cold-blooded vertebrate animal of the class Amphibia. There are three living orders of amphibians: the frogs and toads (order Anura, or Salientia), the salamanders and newts (order Urodela, or Caudata), and the caecilians, or limbless amphibians (order ..... Click the link for more information. of the order Anura. Frogs are found all over the world, except in Antarctica. They require moisture and usually live in quiet freshwater or in the woods. Some frogs are highly aquatic, while others are better adapted to terrestrial habitats. Among the latter type, those with stout bodies and thick skins are often called toadstoad, name applied to certain members of the amphibian order Anura, which also includes the frog. Although there is no clear-cut distinction between toads and frogs, the name toad ..... Click the link for more information. , although the name toad is sometimes restricted to members of the most terrestrial family of the Anura, the Bufonidae. Frogs lack tails in their adult stage. They have short, neckless bodies; long, muscular hind legs specialized for jumping; and webbed feet for swimming. The skin is smooth, usually some shade of green or brown, and often spotted. Frogs have no outer ears; their prominent eardrums are exposed on the sides of the head. The bulging eyes have nictitating membranes to keep the eyes moist. Adult frogs have lungs, but their breathing mechanism is poorly developed. At rest they breathe mainly through the mouth lining, filling the lungs only occasionally. When in wet places they also absorb much dissolved oxygen through their skins. Frogs have true voice boxes and are noted for their various sounds. Frogs capture insects and worms with their sticky, forked tongue, attached at the front of the lower jaw. Some large tropical species eat small mammals and snakes. A few frogs have skin glands that can produce irritating or poisonous secretions. Most frogs hibernate in underwater mud and lay eggs in early spring. With few exceptions fertilization is external. The eggs—up to 20,000 at one time—are fertilized as they are laid in the water and are given buoyancy and protection by a gelatinous covering secreted by the female. The gilled, aquatic larvae, or tadpolestadpole, larval, aquatic stage of any of the amphibian animals. After hatching from the egg, the tadpole, sometimes called a polliwog, is gill-breathing and legless and propels itself by means of a tail. ..... Click the link for more information. , hatch after 3 to 10 days; by the end of their first summer most frogs have completed their metamorphosis to the air-breathing, tailless, carnivorous adult. In some species, however, eggs are laid on land, and the young hatch as tiny frogs. In a handful of species the female gives birth to live young, either as tiny frogs or tadpoles. Growth to adult size usually takes several years. There are over a dozen families of frogs; the term "true frog" is often applied to members of the family Ranidae. The cosmopolitan genus Rana belongs to this family and includes many of the commonest frogs of North America, such as the bullfrog, R. catesbeiana, and the leopard frog, R. pipiens. Species of Rana are important laboratory animals; they are readily available and easy to handle and maintain. Field biologists have in recent years noticed declines in the populations of frogs and other amphibians worldwide. Although pollution and habitat destruction are contributing causes, the main culprit is believed to be a fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, that causes a skin infection. Research has suggested, however, that outbreaks of the fungus are due in part to climatic changes possibly linked to global warming. Frogs are classified in the phylum ChordataChordata , phylum of animals having a notochord, or dorsal stiffening rod, as the chief internal skeletal support at some stage of their development. Most chordates are vertebrates (animals with backbones), but the phylum also includes some small marine invertebrate animals. ..... Click the link for more information. , subphylum Vertebrata, class Amphibia. Bibliography See M. J. Tyler, Frogs (1983); C. Mattison, Frogs and Toads of the World (1987); M. Dorcas and W. Gibbons, Frogs (2011). What does it mean when you dream about a frog?Frogs are associated closely with water, which makes them symbols of the unconscious. Because of the widely known story of the prince who was turned into a frog and then back into a prince, frogs also represent transformation. frog[fräg] (design engineering) A hollow on one or both of the larger faces of a brick or block; reduces weight of the brick or block; may be filled with mortar. Also known as panel. (engineering) A device which permits the train or tram wheels on one rail of a track to cross the rail of an intersecting track. (vertebrate zoology) The common name for a number of tailless amphibians in the order Anura; most have hindlegs adapted for jumping, scaleless skin, and large eyes. frog, panel a brick having frog A depression in the bed face of a brick or building block; used to provide a better key for mortar.frogA relaxed free-fall position commonly used by sky divers.frog11. any insectivorous anuran amphibian of the family Ranidae, such as Rana temporaria of Europe, having a short squat tailless body with a moist smooth skin and very long hind legs specialized for hopping 2. any of various similar amphibians of related families, such as the tree frog
frog2 Music US and Canadiana. the ledge or ridge at the upper end of the fingerboard of a violin, cello, etc., over which the strings pass to the tuning pegs b. the end of a violin bow that is held by the player
frog3 a tough elastic horny material in the centre of the sole of a horse's foot
frog4 a grooved plate of iron or steel placed to guide train wheels over an intersection of railway lines Frog (dreams)Old dream interpretation books say that frogs are good omens and represent happiness and great friendships. From a more modern point of view, frogs may be considered symbols of the unconscious because they live in the water. Frogs also represent transformation of the positive kind. See frogfrog
frog (frog), 1. An amphibian in the order Anura, which includes the toads; the commonest frog genera are Rana (grass frogs) and Hyla (tree frogs). 2. In veterinary medicine, the spongy triangular cushion on the sole of the horse hoof that helps to absorb the shock of impact. [A.S. frogge] frog (frôg, frŏg)n.1. a. Any of numerous tailless aquatic, semiaquatic, or terrestrial amphibians of the order Anura, characteristically having a short vertebral column, a large head, long hind legs used for leaping, and a tadpole stage as larvae.b. Any of various usually aquatic members of this order having smoother skin and longer hind legs than the toads.2. A wedge-shaped, horny prominence in the sole of a horse's hoof.3. Informal Hoarseness or phlegm in the throat.French ROtoblator Group StudyLegalSeepanelFinancialSeeNutFROG
Acronym | Definition |
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FROG➣Flame Resistant Organizational Gear (US Marine Corps) | FROG➣Frequency Resolved Optical Gating (technique that characterizes an ultrashort laser pulse in time) | FROG➣Fully Rely on God | FROG➣Free Rocket Over Ground | FROG➣Furnished Room over Garage (home addition) | FROG➣Finished Room Over Garage | FROG➣Flexible Response to Ongoing Growth | FROG➣Faithfully Rely on God | FROG➣Form Interrogatories (legal discovery) | FROG➣Forever Rely on God | FROG➣Family Room over Garage | FROG➣Fixture Random Output Generator (lighting technology) | FROG➣Flow Regulated Orifice Gauge (carbon dioxide regulator) | FROG➣For Recognition Of Greatness | FROG➣Free Room Over Garage | FROG➣Foolish Repulsive Old Gentlemen (informal/social group of southern California businessmen) | FROG➣Fluent Readers On Grade-Level | FROG➣For Really Organized Guys/Girls | FROG➣Frequent Reacher of Goals |
frog
Synonyms for frognoun any of various tailless stout-bodied amphibians with long hind limbs for leapingSynonyms- anuran
- batrachian
- salientian
- toad
- toad frog
Related Words- amphibian
- ranid
- true frog
- leptodactylid
- leptodactylid frog
- robber frog
- barking frog
- Hylactophryne augusti
- crapaud
- Leptodactylus pentadactylus
- South American bullfrog
- tree frog
- tree-frog
- Ascaphus trui
- bell toad
- ribbed toad
- tailed frog
- tailed toad
- Liopelma hamiltoni
- true toad
- Alytes obstetricans
- obstetrical toad
- midwife toad
- Alytes cisternasi
- Bombina bombina
- fire-bellied toad
- spadefoot
- spadefoot toad
- tree toad
- Gastrophryne olivacea
- western narrow-mouthed toad
- eastern narrow-mouthed toad
- Gastrophryne carolinensis
- sheep frog
- tongueless frog
- South American poison toad
noun a person of French descentSynonymsRelated Words- French person
- Frenchman
- Frenchwoman
noun a decorative loop of braid or cordRelated Wordsverb hunt frogs for foodRelated Words |