dial. or colloq. [f. TRIG v.3] A trot, a hurried walk; a tramp on foot, a trip.

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1884.  Holland, Cheshire Gloss. (E.D.S.) s.v., He’s allus uppo th’ trig (always in a hurry).

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1888.  Blackw. Mag., Sept., 392. The goings on of himself and his comrade on the ‘great trig’ in the wilds of the Scotch Highlands. attrib. Ibid., 396. Nothing remained but to declare the ‘trig’ field season at an end.

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