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  1. Frog-march. A slang expression from the late 19th century, so-called because it describes the method of carrying a drunken or refractory prisoner face downwards between four policemen, each holding a limb.

  2. Jul 8, 2016 · The verb to frog-march (somebody) means to force (somebody) to walk forward by holding and pinning their arms from behind. This sense is milder than the original, as the frog’s march was a police metaphor denoting a method of moving a resistant person such as a prisoner, in which he or she is lifted by….

  3. www.wordorigins.org › big-list-entries › frog-marchfrog march — Wordorigins.org

    Oct 15, 2020 · Frog-marching is a police tactic for moving a recalcitrant prisoner from place to place. The name seems odd to us today because the present-day tactic doesn’t seem to have anything to do with frogs. But that’s because exactly what frog-marching consists of has changed.

  4. frog-march, n.was last modified in July 2023. oed.com is a living text, updated every three months. Modifications may include: further revisions to definitions, pronunciation, etymology, headwords, variant spellings, quotations, and dates; new senses, phrases, and quotations.

  5. 1. a method of carrying a resisting person in which each limb is held by one person and the victim is carried horizontally and face downwards. [...] 2. any method of making a resisting person move forward against his or her will. [...] 3. to carry in a frogmarch or cause to move forward unwillingly. [...]

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Root_beerRoot beer - Wikipedia

    Root beer is a sweet North American soft drink traditionally made using the root bark of the sassafras tree Sassafras albidum or the vine of Smilax ornata (known as sarsaparilla; also used to make a soft drink called sarsaparilla) as the primary flavor.

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  8. Root beer, sweet, nonalcoholic, carbonated beverage commonly flavored with extracts of roots and herbs. Invented in North America, the drink has characteristic herbal, earthy notes that have traditionally been imparted by sassafras root (Sassafras albidum), wintergreen (Gaultheria procumbens), or.

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