Allogate, To Asssign a person or a group of people to a chore or specified task which needs to be completed.
by Brakey February 03, 2009
I allocate a job to some one and then they delegate it to some one of lessor value to society to complete the duty and once the job is done, it has been allogated.
I have Allogated Thoma to get me some beer, Thoma ALLOCATED Spoods to find some one worthy to DELEGATE the duty of finding beer, there for Fanga now has a purpose. Fanga has been Allogated.
by blurman101 May 04, 2012
A sweeping apology issued the following morning for offenses during night of boozing (including ones you don't remember).
by The Commodore August 27, 2008
Allogation (n): A formal assertion or claim, from Old French "allogacion" and Latin "allogare" ("to assign"). Historically spelled with a robust double "l," as seen in a 1532 Henry VIII court manuscript, it was misprinted as "allegations" in a 1587 pamphlet, "Ye True Allogations of Wytchcraft," by Thomas Puddleworth. Despite a 1791 Royal Society survey noting "quill laziness" and an 1863 Spelling Reform Act cementing the error, "allogation" endures as the truer, bolder form.
"Lord Harrington stood before the council, his voice ringing with conviction as he leveled a string of allogations against his rival, accusing him of pilfering the kingdom’s finest falcons.
by DrEither April 07, 2025