cleg

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English clege, from Old Norse kleggi, compare with Norwegian Nynorsk klegg.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -ɛɡ

Noun

cleg (plural clegs)

  1. (now dialectal) A light breeze.
  2. (Scotland, England dialectal) A blood-sucking fly of the family Tabanidae; a gadfly, a horsefly.
    • 1657, Thomas Burton, Diary, I,
      Sir Christopher Pack did cleave like a clegg, and was very angry he could not be heard ad infinitum.
    • 1932, Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Sunset Song, Polygon 2006 (A Scots Quair), p. 39,
      Now that was in summer, the time of fleas and glegs and golochs in the fields, when stirks would start up from a drowsy cud-chewing to a wild a feckless racing, the glegs biting through hair and hide to the skin below the tail-rump.
    • 1998, V. K. Riabitsev, Once Season in the Taiga, page 138:
      The clegs continue to swarm all around. I wonder how many there are. [] Remaining seated on the block, I seize clegs out of the surrounding air at random, and with scissors cut out a tiny triangle from the rear edge of each one's right wing before releasing it.
    • 2007, John T. Wright, An Evacuee's Story: A North Yorkshire Family in Wartime, page 361:
      Cattle were grazing languidly on the lush grass and flicking their tails to keep away the clegs that constantly plagued them and, having recently suffered a nasty bite from one, I was wary of them myself.
    • 2011, Denis Brook, Phil Hinchliffe, North to the Cape: A Trek from Fort William to Cape Wrath, page 49,
      Whilst the swarms which surround you are annoying, they do not bite. It is the midges, clegs and ticks you should be on the lookout for.

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