Veg

Etymology 1
Shortened form of various related words including vegetable, vegetarian, and vegetate.

Adjective

 * 1) vegetarian
 * The food's lip-smackingly good with some veg options, and there's a ham and eggs breakfast for 3KM.
 * The food's lip-smackingly good with some veg options, and there's a ham and eggs breakfast for 3KM.

Noun

 * 1)  vegetable.
 * 2) * 2002, Tom Grahn, "Food compositions and methods of preparing the same", US Patent 6814975, page 5,
 * Secondary foodstuffs are exemplified by the following prepared dishes: vegetarian steaks, gratinated vegs, oven made lasagne, fish and ham with potatoes,
 * meals of meat and three veg were mostly the same three veg, beans peas potatoes, or peas carrots potatoes.
 * meals of meat and three veg were mostly the same three veg, beans peas potatoes, or peas carrots potatoes.

Synonyms

 * veggie

Derived terms

 * meat and two veg

Verb

 * 1)  to vegetate; to engage in complete inactivity; to rest
 * After working hard all week, I decided to stay home and veg on Saturday.
 * And he just sits and vegges on the TV, munches nachos, whatever.
 * And he just sits and vegges on the TV, munches nachos, whatever.

Related terms

 * veg out

Translations

 * Spanish:

Etymology 2
Coined in a 1948 paper in the American Journal of Psychology by Robert S. Harper and S. S. Stevens.,

Noun

 * 1)  A unit of subjective weight, equivalent to the perceived weight of lifting 100 grams.

Anagrams

 * GeV

Adjective

 * 1) weak, yielding

Etymology
From vegr:.

Noun

 * 1) road
 * 2) way
 * 3) direction