slog造句31 It will be a whole year of hard slog before you see their like again ... if you're lucky!
32 Slog away at your studies.
33 School is a hard slog.
34 It is a long hard slog up the mountain.
35 It will be a slog to make a big dent in the nation's unemployment numbers.
36 I eventually got financial backing, but it was a slog.
37 Why should Melissa have to slog around the supermarket on her own?
38 We know that seniority, especially in finance, is a long, hard, unglamorous slog.
39 Working hard makes you feel better about yourself and, after a prolonged period of hard slog, you feel sufficiently virtuous to enjoy a bout of self-indulgence with the gayest abandon.
40 But most choose to slog unhappily on with their sham and desolate unions.
41 The men had to slog up a steep muddy incline.
42 Like Eduardo before him, Ramsey will face a mental test after the physical slog of recovering his fitness.
43 What happens to the supply of willing musicians when the prize is an endless slog through medium-size concerts at $25 a head?
44 If ever there has been a long hard slog of a season this was it.
45 I've just returned from what is likely to be the most harrowing investigative jaunt of my career, a four-day slog through teeming streets filled with screaming children.
46 But etymonline offers two other possibilities, a slang expression "fire a slug" that used to mean take a drink, or from Irish slog that meant swallow.
47 Many drivers — strung out from the long desert slog — prefer to push through the night rather than staying in the seedy roadside inns that serve up young prostitutes as cheaply as mugs of millet beer.
48 But there must be no talk of final victory; rather, the long, hard slog to a solution.
49 I slog my guts out and get paid only a hundred pounds a week.
50 Still Captain Buller broke a window in the Kildare street club with a slog square leg.
51 That is working — particularly in Romania — but it is a slow slog elsewhere.