Frog

  • 11frog|gy — «FROG ee, FRG », adjective, gi|er, gi|est. 1. full of frogs. 2. of, having to do with, or like a frog or frogs: »a gruff, froggy voice …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 12FROG — (Heb. צְפַרְדֵּעַ; ẓefarde a). One of the ten plagues visited upon Egypt was that of frogs (Ex. 7:29; Ps. 78:45; 105:30). They apparently made life intolerable for the Egyptians by their shrill croaking and by contaminating food with their moist… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 13frog — [ frɔg ] noun count * 1. ) a small animal with smooth skin that uses its long back legs to jump from place to place. Frogs are amphibians (=they can live in water and on land) and they develop from tadpoles. ─ compare TOAD 2. ) OFFENSIVE an… …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 14frog — [n] jumping amphibian bullfrog, croaker*, polliwog, toad; concept 394 …

    New thesaurus

  • 15Frog — For other uses, see Frog (disambiguation). Frogs Temporal range: Triassic–present …

    Wikipedia

  • 16FROG — This article is about the block cipher algorithm. For the ultrafast laser pulse measurement technique, see frequency resolved optical gating. For the amphibian, see Frog. For other uses, see Frog (disambiguation). Infobox block cipher name = FROG …

    Wikipedia

  • 17frog — frog1 froglike, adj. /frog, frawg/, n., v., frogged, frogging, adj. n. 1. any tailless, stout bodied amphibian of the order Anura, including the smooth, moist skinned frog species that live in a damp or semiaquatic habitat and the warty, drier… …

    Universalium

  • 18FROG-7 — The FROG 7 is the final version of the FROG family of unguided, spin stabilized, short range artillery rockets. The name “FROG” comes from then NATO designation of Free Rocket Over Ground. The FROG 7 missiles were mounted on the ZIL 135 8x8 army… …

    Wikipedia

  • 19Frög — Wappen Karte …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 20frog — {{11}}frog (1) O.E. frogga, a dim. of frox, forsc, frosc frog, from P.Gmc. *fruska z (Cf. O.N. froskr, M.Du. vorsc, Ger. Frosch frog ), probably lit. hopper, from PIE root *preu to hop (Cf. Skt. provate hops, Rus …

    Etymology dictionary