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trough , but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
trough in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
watering trough (noun 1)
Etymology From Middle English trogh , from Old English troh , trog ( “ a trough, tub, basin, vessel for containing liquids or other materials ” ) , from Proto-West Germanic *trog , from Proto-Germanic *trugą , *trugaz , from Proto-Indo-European *drukós , enlargement of *dóru ( “ tree ” ) .
See also West Frisian trôch , Dutch trog , German Trog , Danish trug , Swedish tråg ; also Middle Irish drochta ( “ wooden basin ” ) , Old Armenian տարգալ ( targal , “ ladle, spoon ” ) . More at tree .
Pronunciation
Noun
trough (plural troughs )
A long , narrow container, open on top, for feeding or watering animals.
One of Hank's chores was to slop the pigs' trough each morning and evening.
Any similarly shaped container.
1961 November, “Talking of Trains: The North Eastern's new rail-mounted piling unit”, in Trains Illustrated , page 646 :Now, covered concrete troughs to house the cables are laid parallel with the railway lines, cheapening maintenance because of improved accessibility for inspection and repair.
1976 , Frederick Bentham, The art of stage lighting , page 233 :It just clips on the front of the stage without any special trough , has no great power and occupies only one dimmer, [ …]
( Australia , New Zealand ) A rectangular container used for washing or rinsing clothes .
Ernest threw his paint brushes into a kind of trough he had fashioned from sheet metal that he kept in the sink.
A short, narrow canal designed to hold water until it drains or evaporates.
There was a small trough that the sump pump emptied into; it was filled with mosquito larvae.
( colloquial ) An undivided metal urinal (plumbing fixture)
( Canada ) A gutter under the eaves of a building; an eaves trough .
The troughs were filled with leaves and needed clearing.
( agriculture , Australia , New Zealand ) A channel for conveying water or other farm liquids (such as milk ) from place to place by gravity ; any ‘U’ or ‘V’ cross-sectioned irrigation channel.
A long, narrow depression between waves or ridges; the low portion of a wave cycle.
The buoy bobbed between the crests and troughs of the waves moving across the bay.
The neurologist pointed to a troubling trough in the pattern of his brain-waves.
( economics ) A low turning point or a local minimum of a business cycle .
Antonym: peak
( meteorology ) A linear atmospheric depression associated with a weather front.
Synonyms
manger (container for feeding animals)
Derived terms
Translations
a long, narrow, open container for feeding animals
Albanian: koritë (sq) f , lug (sq) m
Arabic: فِنْطَاس m ( finṭās )
Armenian: տաշտ (hy) ( tašt ) , կերակրատաշտ ( kerakratašt ) , գուռ (hy) ( guṙ ) ( dialectal )
Basque: ganbela
Belarusian: кары́та n ( karýta )
Bulgarian: корито (bg) n ( korito )
Catalan: cóm (ca) , obi m
Chickasaw: piini'
Chinese:
Mandarin: 槽 (zh) ( cáo ) , 料槽 ( liàocáo ) , 飼槽 / 饲槽 (zh) ( sìcáo )
Chuvash: такана ( tak̬ana )
Crimean Tatar: oluq
Czech: koryto n , žlab (cs) m
Danish: trug
Dutch: trog (nl) m
Esperanto: trogo
Finnish: kaukalo (fi)
French: auge (fr) f (for food), abreuvoir (fr) m (for drinking)
Galician: barcal m , manxadoiro m , pexegueira f , presel m , cambeleira (gl) f (for food), bebedoiro (gl) m , augadoiro (gl) m (for drinking), pía (gl) f , baño (gl) m
German: Trog (de) , Futtertrog (de) m , Mulde (de) f ( regional )
Alemannic German: Barme m
Greek:
Ancient: φάτνη f ( phátnē ) , γοῦρνα f ( goûrna )
Hebrew: שוקת (he) f (shòket), רַהַט (he) m ( ráhat )
Hungarian: vályú (hu)
Ingrian: allas
Irish: trach m
Italian: trogolo (it) , abbeveratoio (it) m
Japanese: かいばおけ ( kaibaoke )
Khiamniungan Naga: yōhchìu
Korean: 구유 ( guyu )
Latin: canālēs m pl , alveus m
Latvian: sile (lv) f
Macedonian: ко́рито n ( kórito )
Maori: waka (mi) , hake
Mongolian: тэвш (mn) ( tevš )
Norwegian:
Bokmål: trau n
Nynorsk: trau n
Old English: trog m
Oromo: bidiruu
Persian: آبشخور (fa) ( âbešxôr )
Polish: koryto (pl) n , żłób (pl) m
Portuguese: cocheira (pt) f , comedouro m , cocho (pt) m
Romanian: troacă (ro) f , adăpătoare (ro) f , vălău n
Russian: коры́то (ru) n ( korýto ) , лоха́нь (ru) f ( loxánʹ ) , корму́шка (ru) f ( kormúška ) ( feeding trough )
S'gaw Karen: ကျီး ( klaẅ )
Scottish Gaelic: amar m
Serbo-Croatian: korito (sh) n , корито n , valov (sh) m
Sicilian: abbiviraturi m , gebbia (scn) f , scifu (scn) f
Slovak: koryto (sk) n , žľab m , hrant m
Slovene: korito (sl) n
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: kóryto n
Upper Sorbian: korto n
Spanish: comedero m (for food), abrevadero (es) m (for drinking)
Swedish: tråg (sv) n , ho (sv) c , ( for feeding ) matho c , ( for watering ) vattenho c
Turkish: yalak (tr)
Ukrainian: кори́то (uk) n ( korýto )
Vietnamese: máng (vi) , máng ăn
a long, narrow container open at the top
Bulgarian: корито (bg) ( korito )
Chickasaw: piini'
Danish: kar , trug
Finnish: kaukalo (fi)
Galician: maseira (gl) f , manxadoira (gl) f , baño (gl) m
German: Trog (de) m
Greek: σκάφη (el) f ( skáfi )
Hebrew: אבוס (he) ( evús )
Hungarian: teknő (hu)
Ingrian: allas
Italian: madia (it) f , tinozza (it) f , mastello (it) m
Latin: linter f
Macedonian: ко́рито n ( kórito )
Norwegian: kar (no) , trau
Polish: koryto (pl) n , żłób (pl) m
Portuguese: cocho (pt) m
Russian: жёлоб (ru) m ( žólob ) , кюве́тка (ru) f ( kjuvétka ) , ва́нночка (ru) f ( vánnočka )
Scottish Gaelic: amar m
Serbo-Croatian: korito (sh) n
* Sicilian: gebbia (scn) m , vacila f , pila (scn) f , scifu (scn) m
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: kóryto n
Spanish: batea (es) f
Swedish: tråg (sv)
short, narrow drainage canal
a gutter under the eaves of a building
a long, narrow depression between waves or ridges
a linear atmospheric depression associated with a weather front
Translations to be checked
Verb
trough (third-person singular simple present troughs , present participle troughing , simple past and past participle troughed )
To eat in a vulgar style, as if from a trough.
He troughed his way through three meat pies.
References
Oxford English Dictionary Online
See also
Anagrams
Middle English
Noun
trough
Alternative form of trogh