boggy
- s (of soil) soft and watery
the ground was boggy under foot
- As the situation in Iraq got boggy, the economy soured and the Bush Administration's popularity face-planted, folks wanted a place to vent.
- Using helicopters to hop across the boggy ground, the crack British troops confronted an Argentine garrison once estimated at about 600.
- Nor is it that in the most expensive film musical ever made (over $30 million), there are sure to be boggy places where what we see is not a fairy tale but a wounded budget .