Use of slog in Sentences. 29 Examples
The examples include slog at the start of sentence, slog at the end of sentence and slog in the middle of sentence
slog at the end of sentence
- This season has been a hard slog.
- Marking the exam papers was quite a slog.
- But it was also going to be a boring slog.
- Writing the book took ten months of hard slog.
- The campaign promises to be a long, hard slog.
- There is little to show for the two years of hard slog.
- That last hill before the finishing-line was a long slog!
- The Charlatans know this. With their inbuilt Brit arrogance, they are avoiding the back-breaking circuit slog.
slog in the middle of sentence
- And that was a real slog from Kumar.
- It's a long hard slog up the mountain.
- He started to slog his way up the hill.
- It'll be a slog, but I know we can do it.
- Just hard slog to move up the world rankings.
- It was a long slog to the top of the mountain.
- The two teams will slog it out for second place.
- He started to slog his way through the undergrowth.
- The exams were a real hard slog but I'm glad I did them.
- The teacher made us slog through long lists of vocabulary.
- From there it was a hard slog to Tokai but, once there, the wine!
- You just have to sit down and slog through long lists of new vocabulary.
- The season had been a hard slog and he felt a break was in the player's interests.
- Now, their lustre faded, they must plough through the qualifying slog to get there.
- The answer is that you would have to slog it out all the way from London to Baghdad.
- The game was a hard slog with no finesse, despite the promotion aspirations of both sides.
- But then, so do the 49ers as they slog their way through three more utterly meaningless games.
- After a long approach slog, reaching the crest of a ridge usually means you're getting somewhere at last.
- Occasionally he would step down the wicket and slog my straight medium pacer straight and high over my head.
- Of course we shall sometimes feel lonely but we were never meant, grim-faced and tight-lipped, to slog on alone.
- Then came Edinburgh and the long hard slog of a medical degree and the various hospital training jobs that followed.
Sentence Examples for Similar Words:
- trudge
- , drag
- , toil
- , tramp
- , grind
- , trek
- , grind
- , effort
- , hike
- , schlep
- , struggle
- , strain
- , plod
- , struggle
- , tramp
- , hike
- , trek
- , trudge