Sc. and dial. Also Sc. loggar. [? An imitative formation; cf. LOG v. and -ER5.] intr. a. To hang loosely and largely (Jam.). b. To walk with a lax gait or in a loose-jointed, swaying fashion (Northumbld. Gloss., 1893). c. To shake as a wheel which has been loosened (Forby, Voc. E. Anglia). Hence † Loggerand ppl. a., ? straddling.
c. 1470. Henryson, Mor. Fab., XIII. (Frog & Mouse), vii. Hir loggerand leggis and her harsky hyde.