See also: foot-slog

English edit

Etymology edit

foot +‎ slog

Noun edit

footslog (plural footslogs)

  1. An instance of footslogging.
    • 1998, Richard John Evans, Tales from the German Underworld: Crime and Punishment in the Nineteenth Century:
      ... which had resulted in a number of the older and weaker felons being weeded out in view of the prospective rigours of a lengthy footslog to Siberia.
    • 2001, Molly Gloss, Wild Life:
      My lovely ramble through the bright woods, as I had been fooling myself, gave itself over to the sober truth: became a slippery footslog through the gloom, ...

Verb edit

footslog (third-person singular simple present footslogs, present participle footslogging, simple past and past participle footslogged)

  1. (intransitive) to walk heavily over a long distance or in a weary manner; to trudge
    • 1967, John David Stewart, Gibraltar: The Keystone:
      Romans, cursing in full armour, had to fight and footslog two thousand miles overland to Britain.
    • 1996, Wilbur A. Smith, The Seventh Scroll:
      The bush is too thick. We will have to footslog up the side.
    • 1998, Peter Hathaway Capstick, Warrior: The Legend of Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen:
      Dick went by train to Voi and then proceeded to footslog across the Serengeti Plains to Taveta.

Anagrams edit