sloggish
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]sloggish (not comparable)
- slow, sluggish
- 1951, Charles Morrow Wilson, The Tropics: World of Tomorrow, page 82:
- the tiny, sweet "ladyfingers" of the Carribbean; the sloggish "water bananas" of Equatorial Africa; and the big, yellow Gros Michel, which has become the standby of American, British Isles, and most European markets.
- 1980, Fannie Safier, Adventures in reading, →ISBN, page 248:
- With a gurgle and gush And a sloggish slush, I spray the logs and spatter the frogs,
- 1995, Sanford M. Dorbin, Never enough light: new & selected poems, 1966-1994, page 117:
- I don't know why, I was just fine. Not at all sloggish.
- 2002, Reserve Bank of Malawi, Financial and Economic Review, volume 34:
- The slow sloggish performance manufacturing and mining and quarrying sectors, as well as the private social and community services sector.