ignifies a quagmire, covered with grass, but not solid enough to support the weight of the body; in which sense it differs only from marshes or fens, as a part from the whole: some even refrain the term bog to quagmires pent up between two hills; whereas fens lie in campaign and low countries, where the descent is very small.—To drain boggy lands, a good method is, to make trenches of a sufficient depth to carry off the moisture; and if these are partly filled up with rough stones, and then covered with thorn-bushes and straw to keep the earth from filling up the interstices, a stratum of good earth and turf may be laid over all; the cavities among the stones will give passage to the water, and the turf will grow at top as if nothing had been done.
Bog, or Bog of Gight, a small town of Scotland, seated near the mouth of the river Spey, in W. Long. 2° 23'. N. Lat. 57° 48'.
Bog-Sparrow. See Farriery, § xxxii. 3.
BOGARMITÆ. See BOGOMILI.