A flap along the edge of a garment; used in medieval clothing.
Sinónimos
Examples for "jag"
Examples for "jag"
1Just scratched herself up with a paper clip, on some freaky jag.
2There was a screeching blue jag of light and a frying noise.
3He gets an overnight jag, and is surly all the next day.
4Then, when it finally went in, you got this big crying jag.
5Somebody on a telephone jag, I thought, though she didn't sound drunk.
1And a dag, apparently, is a spike or a skewer.
2Canst thou read this, and not feel thy conscience begin to throb and dag?
3That was nearly two weeks ago, and he ain't showed up since, dag him!
4Not quite bonzer then, but no dag either.
5So if I'm at home in sweatpants, looking like a total dag, and I step outside?
6Instead of the pistol or dag, which Paulina anticipated, he drew forth a large packet, carefully sealed.
7Read the dag-blamed riot act.
8Fleeces had to be opened with care, and have all pitched or tarred locks, dag-locks, brands, and feltings cut out.
9But the most beloved is kanelbullens dag, which falls on 4 October each year and celebrates Sweden's famed, fragrant cinnamon buns.
10And, drawing his dag, he hurried up the steep steps, while Suffolk followed his example, and three or four arquebusiers ventured after them.
11You slime bucket, you dag, you fuckwit, you fucked-up piece of dog shit, you motherfucker, d'you know what I'm going to do to you?
12Circumstantial evidence suggests that the third holoenzyme, which transcribes from the dagA p4 promoter, is the previously identified E sigma 35.
13Dag came to me last week with the outline for a story.
14DAG stimulates protein kinase C and often promotes cell growth or differentiation.
15It's about working out, from the material, who murdered Dag and Mia.
16The combination of two compounds has an additive effect on DAG concentration.