different between neg vs nog
neg
English
Etymology
Clipping of negative
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /n??/
- Rhymes: -??
Noun
neg (plural negs)
- (debating) Clipping of negative.
Antonyms
- aff
Adjective
neg (not comparable)
- (LGBT, public health) HIV negative
Antonyms
- poz
Verb
neg (third-person singular simple present negs, present participle negging, simple past and past participle negged)
- (Britain slang) To annoy or irritate deliberately. (Can we add an example for this sense?)
- (transitive, seduction community) To express or imply a negative value judgement of someone to make them desire one's approval, especially when trying to pick up a date.
- (nonstandard, Internet slang, transitive) To leave negative feedback in a reputation tracking system.
- I negged the seller who didn't send me the widget I paid for.
Noun
neg (plural negs)
- (seduction community) An expression or implication that one has a negative value judgement of someone in order to make them desire one's approval, especially when trying to pick up a date.
Anagrams
- -gen, ENG, Eng., GEN, Gen, Gen., eng, gen, gen.
Danish
Noun
neg n (singular definite neget, plural indefinite neg)
- sheaf (bundle of grain or straw)
Inflection
Romanian
Etymology
From Latin naevus. Compare the similar sound shift in fagure.
Noun
neg m (plural negi)
- wart
- verruca
Synonyms
- veruc?
See also
- negel
- neghin?
- n?gar?
Welsh
Numeral
neg
- Nasal mutation of deg (“(cardinal) ten”).
Mutation
neg From the web:
- what negative mean
- what neglect means
- what negatively affects home appraisal
- what negative is legally blind
- what negative undertale soul are you
- what do negative mean
- what does a negative mean mean
- what does negative negative mean
nog
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /n??/
- Rhymes: -??
Etymology 1
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Noun
nog (plural nogs)
- A wooden block, the size of a brick, built into a wall, as a hold for the nails of woodwork.
- One of the square logs of wood used in a pile to support the roof of a mine.
- (shipbuilding) A treenail to fasten the shores.
Verb
nog (third-person singular simple present nogs, present participle nogging, simple past and past participle nogged)
- (transitive) to fill in, as between scantling, with brickwork.
- (transitive, shipbuilding) to fasten, as shores, with treenails.
Etymology 2
Noun
nog (plural nogs)
- Short for noggin.
Etymology 3
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Noun
nog (countable and uncountable, plural nogs)
- Abbreviation of eggnog.
- (obsolete) A kind of strong ale.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Halliwell to this entry?)
Etymology 4
Shortened from nig-nog.
Noun
nog (plural nogs)
- (offensive, derogatory, ethnic slur) A dark-skinned person; nig-nog.
- (Australia, dated, ethnic slur) A Vietnamese person.
Anagrams
- -gon, NGO, Ngo, Ong, gon, gon', gon-
Afrikaans
Etymology
From Dutch nog, from Middle Dutch noch, from Old Dutch noch (“until now, still”), from Proto-Germanic *nuh (“still”, literally “now too”), from Proto-Indo-European *nu (“now”) + *-k?e- (“and, also”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /n??/
Adverb
nog
- still
- (with negation) yet
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch noch, from Old Dutch noch (“until now, still”), from Proto-Germanic *nuh (“still”, literally “now too”), from Proto-Indo-European *nu (“now”) + *-k?e- (“and, also”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /n?x/
- Rhymes: -?x
- Homophone: noch
Adverb
nog
- still, as before
- (in negative phrases) yet
- (with an amount) more, in addition
- (with a time) to indicate the time is soon, soon after another event or within the same timespan ? as early as, already
- 1862, Verslag van den staat der hooge-, middelbare en lagere scholen in het Koningkrijk der Nederlanden over 1859–1860, Algemeene Lands-Drukkerij, page 62:
- Zij trad in geene dezer gemeenten nog in 1859 in werking
- In none of these municipalities [the regulation] came in force as early as 1859
- Zij trad in geene dezer gemeenten nog in 1859 in werking
- 1987, André Haakmat, De revolutie uitgegleden, Jan Mets, page 74:
- Toen bleek dat de Nederlandse ambassade onze zorgen deelde, werd besloten de minister met zijn delegatie nog de volgende dag te laten vertrekken.
- When it turned out that the Dutch embassy shared our concerns, it was decided to let the minister with his delegation leave the very next day.
- Toen bleek dat de Nederlandse ambassade onze zorgen deelde, werd besloten de minister met zijn delegatie nog de volgende dag te laten vertrekken.
- 1996, Centraal Economisch Plan, Centraal Planbureau, page 12:
- Naar verwachting zal de groei van de Westeuropese economie zich nog dit jaar herstellen. Maar het is niet zeker of dit nog in de eerste jaarhelft zal aanvangen.
- It's expected that growth of the Western European economy will already recover this year. But it isn't certain if this will already start in the first half of the year.
Note: nog is used much more often in Dutch than its English equivalents; it has been translated here for the sake of elucidation, but one might choose to not translate it at all in this case.
- It's expected that growth of the Western European economy will already recover this year. But it isn't certain if this will already start in the first half of the year.
- Naar verwachting zal de groei van de Westeuropese economie zich nog dit jaar herstellen. Maar het is niet zeker of dit nog in de eerste jaarhelft zal aanvangen.
- 2013, P.J. Risseeuw, Vrijheid en Brood, VBK Media:
- Nog de volgende dag reizen zij af.
- They depart the very next day.
- Nog de volgende dag reizen zij af.
- 1862, Verslag van den staat der hooge-, middelbare en lagere scholen in het Koningkrijk der Nederlanden over 1859–1860, Algemeene Lands-Drukkerij, page 62:
- (with a time) to indicate the time is recent or just before another event ? as recently as, as late as, just
- 1967, Kampioen, volume 82, issue 5, ANWB, page 307:
- De planoloog ir. G. C. Lange, directeur van de Provinciale Planologische Dienst van Zuid-Holland, heeft nog vorig jaar met klem betoogd dat Nederland de boot zal missen wanneer er geen Westerscheldetunnel (of brug) ligt als de Kanaaltunnel wordt opgesteld.
- The urban and country planner eng. G. C. Lange, director of the Provincial Planning Service of South Holland, has just last year strongly expressed the view that the Netherlands will miss the boat when there is no Western Scheldt Tunnel (or bridge) when the Channel Tunnel is opened to the public.
- De planoloog ir. G. C. Lange, directeur van de Provinciale Planologische Dienst van Zuid-Holland, heeft nog vorig jaar met klem betoogd dat Nederland de boot zal missen wanneer er geen Westerscheldetunnel (of brug) ligt als de Kanaaltunnel wordt opgesteld.
- 2008, Alex van Heezik, Strijd om de Rivieren, Van Heezik Beleidsresearch in cooperation with Directoraat-Generaal Rijkswaterstaat/Ministerie van Verkeer en Waterstaat, page 127:
- Door de nieuwe kanalisatietechnieken was het nu ook mogelijk om een grillige rivier als de Maas ‘normaal te maken’ of, zoals dit door het hoofd van de rivierendienst van Rijkswaterstaat, ingenieur F.L. Schlingemann, nog in 1938 werd geformuleerd: door “groote werken aan 's menschen wil te onderwerpen”.
- Through the new canalisation techniques it became possible to ‘normalise’ even a fickle river like the Meuse, or, like the head of the river service of Public Works and Water Management, engineer F.L. Schlingemann, put it as recently as 1938: through “big works subjugate it to man's will”.
- Door de nieuwe kanalisatietechnieken was het nu ook mogelijk om een grillige rivier als de Maas ‘normaal te maken’ of, zoals dit door het hoofd van de rivierendienst van Rijkswaterstaat, ingenieur F.L. Schlingemann, nog in 1938 werd geformuleerd: door “groote werken aan 's menschen wil te onderwerpen”.
- 2010, Cornelis Dekker & Roland Baetens, Geld in het Water, Verloren, page 126:
- De Hontedijk, die Mare en Rilland beschermd had en nog in de winter van 1533 op 1534 door Antwerpen was versterkt, lag er al in 1535 verloren bij.
- The Hontedike, that had protected Mare en Rilland and had just been reinforced by Antwerp in the winter of 1533 and 1534, was already abandoned in 1535.
- De Hontedijk, die Mare en Rilland beschermd had en nog in de winter van 1533 op 1534 door Antwerpen was versterkt, lag er al in 1535 verloren bij.
- 1967, Kampioen, volume 82, issue 5, ANWB, page 307:
Derived terms
Descendants
- Afrikaans: nog
Slovene
Noun
nog
- genitive dual/plural of noga
Swedish
Etymology
From Old Norse nóg, nógr, gnógr, from Proto-Germanic *gan?gaz. Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h?eh?nó?e (“he has reached, attained”), perfective of *h?ne?- (“to reach”).
Pronunciation
Adverb
nog (not comparable)
- enough, sufficient
- Har vi nog med mat för picknicken?
- Do we have enough food for the picnic?
- Har vi nog med mat för picknicken?
- probably
- Det har vi nog.
- We probably do (have that).
- Det har vi nog.
Anagrams
- -gon
Tapachultec
Noun
nog
- water
Usage notes
- This is the form Lehmann says is given in the Sapper-Ricke wordlists; the form given in Johnston's vocabulary is nuc.
References
- Walter Lehmann, Über die Stellung und Verwandtschaft der Subtiaba-Sprache der pazifischen Küste Nicaraguas und über die Sprache von Tapachula in Südchiapas (1915), Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 47, presenting the wordlists of Karl Sapper, Ricke, and Amado Johnston.
Volapük
Adverb
nog
- (with negation) yet
nog From the web:
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- what night is big sky on
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