mong
noun/ˈmʌŋ//mɒŋ//mʌŋ/
Etymology
From Middle English mong, monge, mang, from Old English ġemong, ġemang (“a mixture, mingling, throng, crowd, company”) (whence Modern English among), from Proto-Germanic *mangą (“mix”). Compare Proto-West Germanic *mangijan (“to knead, mix”).
Definitions
A mingling, mixture, or crowd.
A muddle or confusion.
A mongrel dog.
- Some blue cattle-dogs and a small pack of mongs barked excitedly, and danced round, and wished they knew what to do in such an unheard-of situation; and no doubt dreamed for days after of what they had done to distinguish themselves.
›+ 5 more definitionsshow fewer
A person with Down's syndrome.
A stupid person.
- Can't you see you don't belong / You're a stupid little fucking mong
Alternative form of 'mong.
Alternative form of mueang.
A surname from Norwegian, Korean, or Khmer.
The neighborhood
- neighbormong out
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for mong. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA