Tog (unit)
WordNet

verb


(1)   Provide with clothes or put clothes on
"Parents must feed and dress their child"
WiktionaryText

Etymology


From toga, "cloack" or "mantle". It started being used by thievs and vagabonds with the noun togman, which was an old sang word for "cloack". By the 1700s the noun "tog" was used as a short form for "togman", and it was being used for "coat", and before 1800 the word started to mean "clothing". The verb "tog" came out after a short period of time and became a popular word which meant to dress up.

Noun



  1. A cloak.
  2. clothes.
  3. A unit of thermal resistance, being ten times the temperature difference (in °C) between the two surfaces of a material when the flow of heat is equal to one watt per square metre

Etymology 1


From . In the sense "train" from .

Adverb



  1. Misspelling of toch.
    Hij kwam tog? - He came, didn't he?


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