hog
How to Use Hog
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishAs a noun, a pig — or someone greedy. As a verb, to selfishly take up more than your share.
In British English "hog" as a noun mostly means a pig raised for meat or a greedy person; as a verb ("to hog something") it works the same way on both sides of the Atlantic.
Word Forms
hogged past tense, hogged past tense, hogs plural, hogs plural, hogs singular, hogs singular
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
The farmer kept forty _____ in the barn behind the house.
Etymology
From Old English hogg, of uncertain origin — possibly linked to a Germanic root meaning "to cut" (an old hog was originally a castrated pig), or possibly borrowed from an early Celtic word for pig.