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cog

[ UK /kˈɒɡ/ ]
[ US /ˈkɔɡ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a subordinate who performs an important but routine function
    he was a small cog in a large machine
  2. tooth on the rim of gear wheel
VERB
  1. roll steel ingots
  2. join pieces of wood with cogs

How To Use cog In A Sentence

  • They have recognized that their business depends on world of mouth, and that world of mouth is based on customer satisfaction.
  • Dom recognized a master tactician when he saw one. SOMEDAY MY PRINCE
  • A table at the bottom compared the calorie content of 100 ml of beer with the same amount of gin, rum, whisky, cognac and wine.
  • He plays David as a charismatic rogue - someone the audience is supposed to recognize as a bit of a scoundrel, but like nevertheless.
  • It is recognised as a crime against humanity under international law.
  • And some soil-based diseases not only cause physical symptoms, but create cognitive impairment too, crippling a child's long-term potential. Blake Mycoskie: Today, TOMS Asks You to Go 'One Day Without Shoes'
  • The space left by evaporation is called the ullage, while the liquid lost is sometimes called the ‘angels' share’ and is particularly financially significant in the production of older cognac and Armagnac.
  • HIV-positive Pedro Zamora from the San Francisco season, for example, put a face to the stigmatized disease of AIDS and did a world of good with his exposure -- even getting the recognition of then-president Bill Clinton. Ryan O'Connell: Auditioning for the Real World Is Too Real
  • Second, if a Palestinian state is recognized along the 1967 lines in point of fact, nothing more than the 1949 armistice lines, this undermines UN Security Council Resolution 242 and 338 and the Camp David Accords, which call for a negotiated outcome and do not predetermine final boundaries. David Harris: Support Peace: Oppose Palestinian UN Gambit
  • Fingerprint recognition, which falls under a technology called biometrics, has been used for years in the corporate environment.
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