ppl. a. [f. FOG v.1 + -ED1.]
1. Sc. Covered with moss; hence fig. (well) furnished or provided.
1743. R. Maxwell, Sel. Trans. Soc. Improv. Agric. Scot., 100. Being always wet in the Winter and Spring, before it was ditched, the Grass of it is become very sour, full of Sprets, and in many Places fogged.
1790. Shirrefs, Poems, 332.
And better ye were mird or bogget, | |
In case auld lucky be well fogget. |
a. 1800. Jamieson, Pop. Ballads, I. 293.
For nocht but a house-wife was wantin | |
To plenish his weel-foggit byke. |
2. Left under fog: see FOG sb.1 1.
1834. Brit. Husb., I. 484. The practice of putting cattle from fogged-fields into the straw yard at night is so evidently advantageous, that, although it has been objected that the land is thus deprived of manure, it ought never to be neglected.