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Webster 1913 Edition


Bodge

Bodge

,
Noun.
A botch; a patch.
[Dial.]
Whitlock.

Bodge

,
Verb.
T.
[
imp. & p. p.
Bodged
.]
To botch; to mend clumsily; to patch.
[Obs. or Dial.]

Bodge

,
Verb.
I.
See
Budge
.

Webster 1828 Edition


Bodge

BODGE

,
Verb.
I.
[See Boggle.] To boggle; to stop. [Not used.]

BODGE

,
Noun.
A botch. [Not used.]

Definition 2024


Bodge

Bodge

See also: bodge

English

Proper noun

the 'Bodge

  1. A nickname for the country of Cambodia

Usage notes

  • In some contexts may also draw on the meaning and usage of bodge in order to make a humorous statement about aspects of contemporary Cambodian society.

bodge

bodge

See also: Bodge

English

Verb

bodge (third-person singular simple present bodges, present participle bodging, simple past and past participle bodged)

  1. (Britain) To do a clumsy or inelegant job, usually as a temporary repair; mend, patch up, repair.
    • All the actions of his life are like so many things bodged in without any natural cadence or connexion at all. — (A book of characters, selected from the writings of Overbury, Earle, and Butler, Thomas Overbury and John Earle, 1865)
    • Some cars were neglected, others bodged to keep them running with inevitable consequences — (Original Porsche 356: The Restorer's Guide, Laurence Meredith, 2003)
    • Do not be satisfied with a bodged job, set yourself professional goals and standards — (The Restauration Handbook, Enric Roselló, 2007)
  2. To work green wood using traditional country methods; to perform the craft of a bodger.
    • 1978, John Geraint Jenkins, Traditional Country Craftsmen, page 16, ISBN 0710087268.
      His father, grandfather and countless generations before him had obtained a living from chair bodging in the solitude of the beech glades.
    • 1989, John Birchard, "The artful bodger", American Woodworker, page 41, May-June.
      "Bodging is more a curiosity than a valid craft these days," says Don. "But experience in low-tech woodworking is also a good way for the beginner to start getting a feel for turning without having to make a huge investment in a modern lathe."
    • 2000, Beth Robinson Bosk, The New Settler Interviews: Boogie at the Brink, ISBN 189013239X.
      Which is no different than my chair bodging, in that I can go out into the woodland and do my work without having to be tied in to a village shop situation.
Synonyms
  • (make a temporary repair): see Wikisaurus:kludge
Translations

Noun

bodge (plural bodges)

  1. A clumsy or inelegant job, usually a temporary repair; a patch, a repair.
    • 2011 February 22, Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing, retrieved 2012-02-05:
      The simple tool above provides a low-tech bodge to help people locate missing friends and family in Christchurch following today's terrible earthquake.
Synonyms
  • See Wikisaurus:workaround

Derived terms

Related terms

Etymology 2

Unknown

Noun

bodge (plural bodges)

  1. (historical) The water in which a smith would quench items heated in a forge.
  2. (South East England) A four-wheeled handcart used for transporting goods. Also, a homemade go-cart.

Adjective

bodge (comparative more bodge, superlative most bodge)

  1. (slang, Northern Ireland) Insane, off the rails.