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Jogging   /dʒˈɑgɪŋ/  /dʒˈɔgɪŋ/   Listen
Jogging

noun
1.
Running at a jog trot as a form of cardiopulmonary exercise.



Jog

verb
(past & past part. jogged; pres. part. jogging)
1.
Continue talking or writing in a desultory manner.  Synonyms: ramble, ramble on.
2.
Even up the edges of a stack of paper, in printing.  Synonyms: even up, square up.
3.
Run for exercise.
4.
Run at a moderately swift pace.  Synonyms: clip, trot.
5.
Give a slight push to.
6.
Stimulate to remember.



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"Jogging" Quotes from Famous Books



... the wife, jogging her husband's arm. "That's a beautiful old bureau." Then she turned to Miss Ethel. "I dare say you have a lot of old furniture here that will be too big for your little house. Couldn't we offer to relieve you of some of ...
— The Privet Hedge • J. E. Buckrose

... after supper, when the Camp girls were free to do as they pleased, and Agony and Miss Amesbury had come out for a quiet paddle on the river. The excitement of Regatta Day had subsided, and Camp was jogging peacefully toward its close. Only a few more days and then the Carribou would come and take away the merry, frolicking campers, and the Alley and the Avenue alike ...
— The Campfire Girls at Camp Keewaydin • Hildegard G. Frey

... "I shall be jotting down the provisions of my last will and testament as we are jogging ...
— Patsy • S. R. Crockett

... and watched for riders coming our way. But none appeared. Once I thought I glimpsed a moving speck on the farther bank of Lost River. MacRae brought the glasses to bear, and said it was two Policemen jogging toward camp. Then we were sure that our flight had not been observed, and we dropped into a depression that gradually deepened to a narrow-bottomed canyon. Two miles down this we came to the spring of which MacRae had spoken, a tiny stream issuing from a crevice at the foot ...
— Raw Gold - A Novel • Bertrand W. Sinclair

... hope of my victim's ultimate reappearance. Not entirely passively, however, for, after the shop was shut, I went abroad nightly to frequent the foreign restaurants and other less reputable places of the East End in the hopes of meeting him and jogging his memory. The active employment kept my mind occupied and made the time of waiting seem less long; but it had no further result. I never met the man; and, as the weeks passed without bringing him to my net, I had the uncomfortable feeling that his hair must have grown and been trimmed ...
— The Uttermost Farthing - A Savant's Vendetta • R. Austin Freeman


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