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  1. 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 the arms and legs and carried in a prone position with the face pointing towards the ground.

  2. The earliest known use of the noun frog-marchis in the 1870s. OED's earliest evidence for frog-marchis from 1871, in the Evening Standard(London). frog-marchis formed within English, by compounding. Etymons:frogn.1, marchn.5.

  3. The earliest known use of the verb frog-march is in the 1880s. OED's earliest evidence for frog-march is from 1884, in the Sporting Times. It is also recorded as a noun from the 1870s. frog-march is formed within English, by conversion. Etymons: frog-march n.

  4. 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. The tactic originated in London, and the earliest reference to it is in ...

  5. 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. Nowadays it can mean a pre-emptory summons rather than a hands-on forced march, as in “I was frog-marched into a meeting this morning.”.

  6. Oct 29, 2022 · The noun phrase “frog marched” first showed up in Britain at the end of the 19 th century. This historical term was described by the Oxford English Dictionary as. “A method of moving a resistant person (such as a prisoner), in which he or she is lifted by the arms and legs and carried in a prone position with the face pointing towards the ...

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  8. All you need to know about "FROG-MARCH" in one place: definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

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