sprog

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English

Etymology

1940s, originally service slang. Perhaps from obsolete sprag (lively young man), of unknown origin.

Pronunciation

Noun

sprog (countable and uncountable, plural sprogs)

  1. (UK, Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, informal, humorous) A child.
    • 1984 September 13, Donald Gould, Forum: Suck it and see, page 54:
      To test this hypothesis further, he and his mate Fifer persuaded 16 women, heavy with child, to read a story called The Cat in the Hat to their unborn sprogs, twice a day, during the last few weeks of their pregnancies.
    • 2008, Julian Knight, Wills, Probate, & Inheritance Tax For Dummies, UK, unnumbered page:
      Any guardianship or trusts that you set up when your children were little sprogs may no longer be needed.
    • 2010, Brett Atkinson, Sarah Bennett, Scott Kennedy, New Zealand′s South Island, Lonely Planet, page 220:
      Kids will love the climbing wall and NZ′s highest vertical slide. If the sprogs get bored with reality, movie make-believe (p232) is right next door.
  2. (UK, military, RAF, slang, derogatory) A new recruit.
  3. (uncountable, Australia, slang, dated) Semen.
  4. (countable, slang) A deflection-limiting safety device used in high performance hang gliders.

Synonyms

Derived terms

Verb

sprog (third-person singular simple present sprogs, present participle sprogging, simple past and past participle sprogged)

  1. (UK, Australia, slang, humorous) To produce children.
    • 2007, Libby Purves, Love Songs and Lies, unnumbered page:
      You must have been terrified, it′s not like today with film stars sprogging babies everywhere.
    • 2008, Lucy Diamond, Over You, unnumbered page:
      ‘How′s it all going with your boyo in the valleys? Any plans for sprogging or vows or anything serious yet?’
    • 2009, Peter James, Dead Tomorrow, unnumbered page:
      ‘Women lose their sexual drive after they′ve sprogged,’ Norman Potting interjected.
  2. (Australia, slang) To ejaculate, to come.
    Synonyms: spoof; see also Thesaurus:ejaculate
    • 2004, Kathryn Fox, Malicious Intent, Pan MacMillan Australia, unnumbered page,
      The kid was fathered by the same guy who sprogged into Debbie Finch′s throat.

Anagrams

Danish

Etymology

Borrowed from Middle Low German sprâke. Cognate to German Sprache, Dutch spraak, Norwegian språk, Old English sprǣċ and Swedish språk.

Pronunciation

Noun

sprog n (singular definite sproget, plural indefinite sprog)

  1. language

Declension

Declension of sprog
neuter
gender
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative sprog sproget sprog sprogene
genitive sprogs sprogets sprogs sprogenes

Derived terms

Further reading