0 a low framework on wheels, put under another vehicle such as a rail carriage so it can move: --
1 something that causes fear in many people, often without reason: --
He has raised the bogie of "privatization", striking a nationalist chord with many.
2 in golf, the act of getting the ball into the hole in one shot (= hit) more than par (= the expected number) for that hole: --
3 (in golf) to score a bogie for a particular hole: --
He bogied three of the last five holes.
Indeed, it was awarded a contract to build bogies.
Apart from the objections of compulsion, there have been raised certain common bogies why this reform should not be carried into operation.
The front and rear bogies had sheared off a coach; the shaft was massive.
And that will always be over the bogies.
The remaining eight wagons were a mix of four-wheel flats and bogie vans, all of which were empty.
There are two or three bogies still to be settled.
They should not have gone back into the past and tried to raise the bogies of the inter-war years.
We want the growth, and at the same time we want to banish all the bogies, the exchange crises, unemployment, rising prices and so on.