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tug
[ tuhg ]
verb (used with object)
- to pull at with force, vigor, or effort.
- to move by pulling forcibly; drag; haul.
- to tow (a vessel) by means of a tugboat.
verb (used without object)
- to pull with force or effort:
to tug at a stuck drawer.
- to strive hard; labor; toil.
noun
- an act or instance of tugging; pull; haul.
- a strenuous contest between opposing forces, groups, or persons; struggle:
the tug of young minds in a seminar.
- that by which something is tugged, as a rope or chain.
- (on a harness)
- any of various supporting or pulling parts.
tug
/ tʌɡ /
verb
- whenintr, sometimes foll by at to pull or drag with sharp or powerful movements
the boy tugged at the door handle
- tr to tow (a vessel) by means of a tug
- intr to work; toil
noun
- a strong pull or jerk
he gave the rope a tug
- Also calledtugboattowboat a boat with a powerful engine, used for towing barges, ships, etc
- a hard struggle or fight
- a less common word for trace 2
Derived Forms
- ˈtugger, noun
Other Words From
- tugger noun
- tugless adjective
- un·tugged adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of tug1
Example Sentences
Firstly, inheritance tax, perhaps like no other tax, has an outsized emotive tug on so, so many people - in fact a far greater number of people than are ever likely to end up paying it.
Meanwhile, Lidl - like John Lewis - has gone for a classic tale designed to tug at the heartstrings.
The load on the tug's towlines was also between two and five times more than Clydeport's recommended speed range.
It found the pilot had not worked with tugs like Biter before and "did not understand" what the tug would be doing on the manoeuvre.
The report also highlighted that the cruise ship's master and tug masters did not have a "shared understanding" of the plan of the Clydeport pilot, who was controlling Hebridean Princess at the time.
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