From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishbogiebo‧gie1 /ˈbəʊɡi $ ˈboʊ-/ noun [countable] DSGa bogey
Examples from the Corpus
bogie• L - 27-29,31-35 Brush bogie cars.• Billy Tolboys was sitting on a crane bogie with his head buried in his hands.• He breaks into a wide smile, and a dried bogie snowflakes from his nose down to the ground.• Therefore, the nine bogie cars and a few four wheelers were transferred to Sutton and worked the Mitcham line from there.• It is all outside frame with vacuum brakes on the rear bogie.• In a more mellow mood, the bogie will simply play practical jokes.• Two bogie cars were not allowed to pass each other on the curve at the top of Ringstead Road.• Nos. 44 and 48 passed to London Transport still with bogie mounted plough carriers.bogiebogie2 verb [transitive] DSGto use one more than par (=the usual number of strokes) to get the ball into the hole in golf→ See Verb table