n. A gelded pig; a barrow-pig.n. An omnivorous non-ruminant mammal of the family Suidœ, suborder Artiodactyla, and order Ungulata; a pig, sow, or boar; a swine.n. Some animal like or likened to a hog, not of the family Suidœ. See wart-hog, Phacochœrus, peccary, and Dicotyles.n. A sheep shorn in the first year, or just after the first year; a young sheep.n. A young colt.n. A bullock a year old.n. One who has the characteristics of the hog; a mean, stingy, grasping, gluttonous, or filthy person.n. Nautical, a sort of scrubbing- broom for scraping a ship's bottom under water.n. A stirrer or agitator in the pulp-vat of a paper-making plant.n. A shilling, or perhaps a sixpence.To cut (the hair) short: as, to hog a horse's mane.To scrape (a ship's bottom) under water.To carry on the back.To droop at both ends, so as to resemble in some degree a hog's back in outline: said of the bottom of a ship when in this condition either through faulty construction or from accident.In the manège, to hold or carry the head down, like a hog.n. In the game of curling, a stone which does not go over the hog-score; also, the hog-score itself.In curling, to play, as a stone, with so little force that it does not clear the hog-score.n. A small locomotive used for hauling cars about mines; a hogback locomotive.n. A machine for grinding logs.n. In shipbuilding, the condition of being hogged: generally used quantitatively with reference to the amount of deflection from the normal condition. See hog, intransitive verb, 1.To act as greedily and as selfishly as a hog in regard to (something); take more than one's share of; appropriate selfishly.