scrog
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Compare scrag, or Scottish Gaelic sgrogag (“anything shriveled”), from sgrag (“to compress, shrivel”).
Pronunciation
[edit]- Rhymes: -ɒɡ
Noun
[edit]scrog (countable and uncountable, plural scrogs)
- A stunted or shrivelled bush.
- Brushwood.
- (heraldry, countable) The branch of a tree, especially one used as a charge in Scottish heraldry.
- 1680, George Mackenzie, Observations Upon the Laws and Customs of Nations, as to Precedency, page 59:
- Argent, a Palm-tree growing out of a Mount in base proper, surmounted of S. Andrews-cross Gules, on a chiet azur [...]. Azur, a Cheveron Or, betwixt two Scrogs or starved branches in chief, and a mans heart in base argent.
- (Scotland, countable) The crab-apple tree.
- (dialect) A blackthorn.