Etymology

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baldpate":3o7xf4ad said:
Even that font of all knowledge on the English Language - the Oxford English Dictionary - doesn't mention this sense of the noun "frog", let alone it's etymology.

Even the OED can't/doesn't track the jargon of all the trades. Too much work. c.f. "tote".

BugBear
 
horse-hoof-2.gif
My latest stab in the dark goes hoof-frog looks like bayonet-frog = knife carrier but I could be wrong (homer)
 

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Tom K":16uwyi8o said:
My latest stab in the dark goes hoof-frog looks like bayonet-frog = knife carrier but I could be wrong (homer)

Frogs are all too often overlooked when considering their utility as a descriptive outline. :D
 
Thomas Corkhill's Glossary of Wood describes a frog as: 'A heavy timber at the mouth of a slide to control the direction of discharge of a log.' I presume this is a forestry term, but not sure if it might or might not be connected to planes.

Nick
 

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