From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishvegveg1 /vedʒ/ noun [countable, uncountable] British English informal vegetables fruit and veg
Examples from the Corpus
veg• This was well before it became a tourist attraction, when it was still a fruit and veg market.• And that is not just for horticultural produce like fruit and veg, which are already the subject of strict production standards.• Fresh meat, fruit and veg.• I was down the market every day with my shopper, dear, for veg.• Fresh veg come already cleaned and cheese already grated - and you can go shopping on Sunday straight from Church.• The heap of lumber on my neighbour's veg patch grew to monstrous proportions.• Down with Roast beef and two veg!• Two veg and Oxo gravy is not my style.vegveg2 verb (vegged, vegging, vegges) → veg out→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpus
veg• We were just vegging out in front of the TV.Origin veg (1900-2000) vegetate veg1 (1900-2000) vegetable