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Showing results for hog-backed. Search instead for Roach-backed.

hog-backed

American  
[hawg-bakt, hog-] / ˈhɔgˌbækt, ˈhɒg- /

adjective

  1. cambered, as the ridge of a roof, a hill, etc.


Etymology

Origin of hog-backed

First recorded in 1645–55

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

It was hog-backed in shape, and was strewn here and there with great, tumbled masses of dark-coloured rock, among which grew a few straggling bushes.

From Through Veld and Forest An African Story by Webb, Archibald

Westward rose the long, black, hog-backed outline of Bulwana Hill, and while we watched intently the ghost of a flash stabbed its side and a white patch sprang into existence, spread thinner, and vanished away.

From London to Ladysmith via Pretoria by Churchill, Winston

Before us was a plain upon which was growing a tall, reed-like grass; and in the centre of this plain was a long, hog-backed hillock, bare of trees.

From Treasure of Kings Being the Story of the Discovery of the \"Big Fish,\" or the Quest of the Greater Treasure of the Incas of Peru. by Gilson, Charles

The Submarine lay motionless on the surface with the waves breaking over the hog-backed hull.

From The Long Trick by Bartimeus

The church has been altered in modern times; there are good specimens in the churchyard of hog-backed tombstones, with figures of fish scale pattern arranged in rows, and scales of a squarer shape.

From Scottish Cathedrals and Abbeys by Butler, Dugald