What's the difference between shod and shog?

Shod


Definition:

  • (imp. & p. p.) f Shoe.
  • (imp. & p. p.) of Shoe

Example Sentences:

  • (1) By using a rubber shod Bainbridge type vascular clamp during myomectomy, the uterine blood supply coming from the ovarian artery can be interrupted medial to the ovary, allowing for adnexal perfusion.
  • (2) Competition experiments with unlabeled compounds shod d that the binding was reversible and saturable as well as stereo- and regiospecific.
  • (3) It is also hypothesized that the known inability of this arch of the shod foot to deflect without failure (foot rigidity) is responsible for the high injury frequency in shod populations.
  • (4) This sad and dreary episode, when Finnish soldiers were compelled to fight their former comrades-in-arms, is, for example, the subject of Antti Tuuri's bestselling novel of 2012, Rauta-antura (Iron-shod).
  • (5) Significant differences between the predominance in shod and unshod children were noted in all age groups, most marked in those with generalised ligament laxity.
  • (6) Keeping Canvas in its current form would be "catastrophic for small-scale services seeking to promote democratic participation and civil society" as the joint venture partners ride rough-shod over the interests of local communities, the company argues in its 70 page submission.
  • (7) Oh, and having shod the entire fashion industry in her cult skate sneakers, she revealed next season’s must-have flat: a neat, elasticated white ballet slipper, flat or with a small block heel.
  • (8) Aristotle offers a very simple example of this: "On he came, his feet shod with his – chilblains."
  • (9) The freshly shod Hamilton moved past Ricciardo and into second place.
  • (10) A number of reports indicate an extremely low running-related injury frequency in barefoot populations in contrast to reports about shod populations.
  • (11) Before surgery the animal wanted to rear after exercise and could not stand on 3 legs for any length of time while being shod.
  • (12) He was my boss – and when, in his anger at my failure to adequately collate the minutes from last week's interdepartmental steering meeting, he stamped his beautifully shod foot (Church's or possibly even Lobb's) on mine … I orgasmed at once, a nerve-shattering orgasm that curled my hair and curdled the low-fat yoghurt drink that was sitting on a nearby desk.
  • (13) I call on politicians in both Holyrood and Westminster to do all they can to stop employers like Mr Ashley thinking they can ride rough shod over workers rights.” Under European legislation the Insolvency Service will have to pick up the bill for the 50 workers, but it is only obliged to pay eight weeks’ worth of the compensation to which they are entitled.
  • (14) I’m very glad that this law firm was able to help the workers involved and call on politicians in both Holyrood and Westminster to do all they can to stop employers like Mr Ashley thinking they can ride rough shod over workers rights.” About 80 workers at the Dundonald warehouse lost their jobs when administrators were called into West Coast Capital (USC), a Sports Direct-controlled entity that owned 28 stores in the retailer’s USC chain.
  • (15) This paper describes the application of foil strain gauges to the hoof wall, and the use of measuring equipment to monitor weightbearing and changes in hoof shape in shod and unshod horses.
  • (16) To shorten the period of non-activity, working ponies were shod and the hoof wall defect was packed with technovit or a combination of glue with cotton cuttings.
  • (17) The distribution of force beneath the plantar foot surface during shod distance running, a kinetic descriptor of locomotion not previously reported, was recorded for ten rearfoot striking runners.
  • (18) Flaubert wished to close the gap not just between words and emotional truths, but between words and things: the sound of Hippolyte's wooden leg in the church ("They heard on the flagstones something like the sharp click of an iron-shod pole tapping them with even strokes"); the lumbering sway of cattle; the scoop of a hand in sugar-white arsenic.
  • (19) However, significant differences were observed when barefoot and shod walking were compared.
  • (20) Normal and abnormal feet, both barefoot and shod, were investigated in sixteen subjects.

Shog


Definition:

  • (n.) A shock; a jog; a violent concussion or impulse.
  • (v. t.) To shake; to shock.
  • (v. i.) To jog; to move on.

Example Sentences:

Words possibly related to "shog"