ppl. a. Also 5 swonge(n. [Pa. pple. of SWING v.1]
† 1. Cookery. Beaten up. Obs.
c. 1420. Liber Cocorum (1862), 36. Take swongen eyrene and floure þer to.
c. 1467. Noble Bk. Cookry (1882), 120. Grind raw pork and temper them with swonge egges.
2. Caused to oscillate; suspended; wielded with rotatory movement, etc.: see the verb.
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.
1908. Binyon, Lond. Visions, 14. Out of its slumber roused, intense, To the swung axe a demon calls.