Definition of "mog"
mog1
verb
third-person singular simple present mogs, present participle mogging, simple past and past participle mogged
(intransitive, transitive, stative, Internet slang) To be significantly more attractive than (someone or something); to dominate in appearance.
Quotations
Seriously, whenever I'm on campus, I just get mogged to fucking oblivion. The men are all so fucking god-like compared to a subhuman loser like me.
2018 August 30, u/ATrashcanInHumanForm, “How can I cope when I'm constantly mogged by gods among men?”, in Reddit, archived from the original on 2023-06-11
"Watching a Gigachad mog [i.e., outperform] a Chad will be the most pleasurable moment of my life," wrote an incels.co user last year, as "in that moment a Chad will truly understand the pain incels go through."
2021 February 1, Miles Klee, “Fear of the Impossible GigaChad”, in MEL Magazine, archived from the original on 2023-03-23
she's not even upset about them mogging her, she's upset them looking the same as her. She considers being our equal to be a horror of horrors.
2022 September 15, u/ntr5ctr, “cis woman has bdd about looking similar to mtf celebrities (ones that actually pass like hunter) 💀 its over if you dont cispass, people will always see you as male”, in Reddit, r/4tran, archived from the original on 2022-09-15
mog2
verb
third-person singular simple present mogs, present participle mogging, simple past and past participle mogged
(intransitive, US, UK, dialectal) To move or walk slowly; to trudge, amble; (more broadly) to go.
Quotations
They marched, grumbling and threatening, but Sile never paid a bit of attention. He just mogged on behind, and every time one of them turned, he wiggled his gun, and that was enough.
1923, Clarence Budington Kelland, Catty Atkins, Financier, New York, N.Y., London: Harper & Brothers Publishers, page 128
He was mogging around on the Muskrat Creek near Indian Lake when he shot and wounded a big buck with the finest head that he had ever seen, a set of horns that he would never forget.
1978, Harvey L. Dunham, Adirondack French Louie: Early Life in the North Woods, Sylvan Beach, N.Y.: North Country Books, page 102
But mostly, that dark and rainy afternoon — as I mogged back and forth between boat and office, and then, all books and papers and twenty-seven boxes of Nick the Nose safely aboard, distributed the cargo here and there from stem to stanchion— I thought about Gaybee, her place in the ground, and how sorrowfully soon she had come to it.
1979, William Kelley, The Tyree Legend, New York: Simon and Schuster, page 350
We know that economist and ex-con Vicky Pryce went properly nuclear when her husband Chris Huhne mogged off with his aide, resulting in wrecked political careers, a family torn asunder and custodial sentences.
2013 October 10, Rebecca Armstrong, “Revenge is a dish best served... by a woman”, in The Independent, London: Independent News & Media, archived from the original on 2022-07-06
(transitive, US, UK, dialectal, rare) To cause to move; to drive.
Quotations
"I've been directed here to find Miss Susan Pike," the man outside explained, between fresh coughings. ¶ "Well, then, mog your boots out of this as quick as ever you can!" my Aunt replied, with great promptitude. "You won't find her here!"
1894, Harold Frederic, “My Aunt Susan”, in Marsena and Other Stories of the Wartime, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner's Sons, page 200
(transitive, intransitive) In the game of costly colours: to exchange (a card) with the dealer.
Quotations
Mogging or Changing. The cards being dealt, the first player asks the dealer if he will mog, i. e. exchange a card with him. Should he refuse, the challenger scores 1. […] If the opposite partners do not mog, the dealer has the privilege of mogging with the 'deck,' which he does by taking the card next under the trump and substituting in its place one out of his own hand.
1886, Georgina F[rederica] Jackson, edited by Charlotte Sophia Burne, Shropshire Folk-Lore: A Sheaf of Gleanings, London: Trübner & Co., page 648
mog3
noun
plural mogs
Quotations
The more I hear about Larry the Downing Street cat, the more his story becomes an allegory for our time. As previously reported, the reputation of this mog was trashed by Downing Street spin doctors after he was brought in to clear the Prime Minister’s workplace of mice in 2011.
2013 October 18, Andy McSmith, “Andy McSmith's Diary: Even Larry the cat is not safe from factions in Downing Street”, in The Independent, London: Independent Digital News & Media Ltd, archived from the original on 2022-10-15
A few months before she died, Winefride had started setting food out for a brindled mog named Sally who lived in their neighborhood. She was always feeding local cats, but she especially loved this mog, and eventually, Sally grew enormous.
2016, Bill Broun, Night of the Animals, New York, N.Y.: Ecco, page 172
Many pet owners have taken up cat-walking in recent years, encouraged by others on social media and by the growing range of outdoorsy cat kit on offer. But for most mogs, the RSPCA suggests, "an indoor environment with plenty of opportunities to be active and mentally stimulated is likely to be more beneficial for the cat's welfare than walking them on a lead."
2017 August 14, Tim Walker, “Should you take your cat out on a lead?”, in The Guardian, London: Guardian News & Media, archived from the original on 2022-10-05
mog4
verb
third-person singular simple present mogs, present participle mogging, simple past and past participle mogged
(transitive, Australia, informal) To remove (a public servant) from their position following a Machinery of Government change, a process in which the Government of Australia reorganizes the responsibilities and structure of the government.
Quotations
The slowdown in house purchases prior to an election is natural, but not because public servant buyers are skittish about the political climate. They just don't want to watch the ink dry on their sale on a house in Tuggeranong, close to their department, only to be comprehensively mogged and presented with a commute to another building in faraway Belconnen - or worse, Gosford.
2013 October 1, “The public service guide to getting mogged”, in The Canberra Times, archived from the original on 11 April 2023
[Kevin] Rudd, [Peter] Coaldrake and [Glyn] Davis joined [Wayne] Goss, [Tom] Burns and Treasurer Keith De Lacy on the Machinery of Government (MOG) Committee that reviewed the reports of the PSMC (and led to the idiom that people had been 'mogged').]
[2014, Patrick Weller, Kevin Rudd: Twice Prime Minister, Victoria, Australia: Melbourne University Press, page 56
But recently under a machinery of government change, with the centralisation of the cybersecurity function under Alastair MacGibbon, that team has been mogged out from the DTA.
2018 February 26, Asha Barbaschow, quoting Gavin Slater, “Digital Transformation Agency wants its cybersecurity team back”, in ZDNET, archived from the original on 20 October 2022
After every election there is a lot of focus on the reshuffle – the personnel changes as a prime minister creates their new team. But civil servants will also be looking to see if it is not just their ministerial team who are reshuffled but whether they have been "mogged" – the verb the Australians use for what we rather less dramatically call "subjected to a machinery of government change". If we read the manifestos, there is quite a lot of potential "mogging" on offer.
2019 December 11, Jill Rutter, “You've been mogged: what machinery of government changes can we expect?”, in King's College London, archived from the original on 2020-04-16
On Friday night, at the stroke of midnight, over 70,000 Commonwealth workers will be mogged, as the [Scott] Morrison government's abolition of four portfolios officially take effect, with an expected cost of $80 million.
2020 January 31, Tom Burton, “Why 70,000 public servants are dreading midnight”, in Australian Financial Review, Sydney: Nine Entertainment, archived from the original on 12 April 2023