ppl. a. Also 5 swonge(n. [Pa. pple. of SWING v.1]

1

  † 1.  Cookery. Beaten up. Obs.

2

c. 1420.  Liber Cocorum (1862), 36. Take swongen eyrene and floure þer to.

3

c. 1467.  Noble Bk. Cookry (1882), 120. Grind raw pork and temper them with swonge egges.

4

  2.  Caused to oscillate; suspended; wielded with rotatory movement, etc.: see the verb.

5

1812.  Sir T. Lawrence, in Williams, Life & Corr. (1831), I. 318. A wee modest cart, with an old higgler in it, sitting on a swung seat.

6

1908.  Binyon, Lond. Visions, 14. Out of its slumber roused, intense, To the swung axe a demon calls.

7