- See Bay of Pigs
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025
Pigs
(pigz),USA pronunciation n.
- Place Names Bay of. See Bay of Pigs.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
pig1 /pɪg/USA pronunciation
n., v., pigged, pig•ging.
n.
v.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025n.
- Animal Husbandry[countable] a short, fat mammal with hooves;
a young swine of either sex, esp. one kept on a farm and weighing less than 120 lb. (54 kg). - [countable] any swine.
- [uncountable] the flesh of this animal;
pork. - [countable] one who eats too much, is greedy, or is very sloppy.
- Slang Terms[countable](disparaging). a police officer.
v.
- pig out, [no object][Slang.]to eat too much food:We pigged out on pizza last night.
pig1
(pig),USA pronunciation n., v., pigged, pig•ging.
n.
v.t.
v.i.
pig2 (pig),USA pronunciation n. [Scot. and North Eng.]
n.
- Animal Husbandrya young swine of either sex, esp. a domestic hog, Sus scrofa, weighing less than 120 lb. (220 kg.)
- any wild or domestic swine.
- the flesh of swine;
pork. - a person of piglike character, behavior, or habits, as one who is gluttonous, very fat, greedy, selfish, or filthy.
- Slang Termsa slatternly, sluttish woman.
- Slang Terms[Disparaging.]a police officer.
- Mechanical Engineering[Mach.]any tool or device, as a long-handled brush or scraper, used to clear the interior of a pipe or duct.
- Metallurgy
- an oblong mass of metal that has been run while still molten into a mold of sand or the like, esp. such a mass of iron from a blast furnace.
- one of the molds for such masses of metal.
- metal in the form of such masses.
- pig iron.
- British Terms on the pig's back, [Australian Slang.]in a fortunate position.
v.t.
- Metallurgyto mold (metal) into pigs.
- Informal Termsto eat (something) quickly;
gulp:He pigged three doughnuts and ran off to school.
v.i.
- Animal Husbandryto bring forth pigs;
farrow. - pig it:
- Idiomsto live like a pig, esp. in dirt.
- Idiomsto lead a disorganized, makeshift life;
live without plan or pattern.
- pig out, [Slang.]to overindulge in eating:We pigged out on pizza last night.
- Old Norse word meaning "young, small,'' applied in Scandinavian to girls but in Old English to swine
- 1175–1225; Middle English pigge young pig, with doubled consonant appropriate to terms for smaller animals (compare dog, frog1) but with no obvious relations; almost certainly not akin to Low German, Dutch big(ge), Middle Dutch vigghe young pig, which involve further obscurities; if Danish pige, Swedish piga maid, young girl are compared, perh.
pig2 (pig),USA pronunciation n. [Scot. and North Eng.]
- Scottish Termsan earthenware crock, pot, pitcher, or jar.
- Scottish Termspotter's clay;
earthenware as a material.
- ?
- late Middle English pygg 1400–50
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
an expression of derision or disagreement
Also (vulgar): pig's arse, pig's bum
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
any artiodactyl mammal of the African and Eurasian family Suidae, esp Sus scrofa (domestic pig), typically having a long head with a movable snout, a thick bristle-covered skin, and, in wild species, long curved tusks a domesticated pig weighing more than 120 pounds (54 kg) Related adjective(s): porcinea dirty, greedy, or bad-mannered person the meat of swine; pork a police officer a mass of metal, such as iron, copper, or lead, cast into a simple shape for ease of storing or transportation a mould in which such a mass of metal is formed something that is difficult or unpleasant an automated device propelled through a duct or pipeline to clear impediments or check for faults, leaks, etc - a pig in a poke ⇒
something bought or received without prior sight or knowledge - make a pig of oneself ⇒
to overindulge oneself - on the pig's back ⇒
successful; established: he's on the pig's back now
- (intransitive)
(of a sow) to give birth - Also: pig it (intransitive)
to live in squalor - (transitive)
to devour (food) greedily
'Pigs' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
Altamira
- Bahía de Cochinos
- Bay of Pigs
- Captain Cooker
- E
- ICSH
- artiodactyl
- ascarid
- ballast
- brucellosis
- but
- chook
- cote
- et cetera
- farrow
- foot-and-mouth disease
- grunt
- hyoscyamus
- kidney worm
- lights
- litter
- mast
- measled
- measles
- milt
- negative
- nuzzle
- pannage
- pickled pigs' feet
- pig
- pig bed
- pig iron
- pig lead
- piggery
- pigpen
- pigs in blankets
- pigs' feet
- pigsty
- pigswill
- porcine
- pork
- roundworm
- rout
- runt
- slop
- slop pail
- sooey
- sow
- stand
- sty