单词 | fag |
释义 | fagn.1ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > [noun] > imperfection in fag1463 nib1771 mote1842 1463–5 Rolls of Parl.: Edward IV (Electronic ed.) Parl. Apr. 1463 §17. m. 4 In case that eny such diversite, or rawe, scawe, kokell or fagge happen to be in eny part of the seid clothes. 1764 T. Cunningham New & Compl. Law-Dict. II. Fag, a knot or excrescency in cloth. [Also in later dictionaries.] 2. Any of various parasitic insects which infect sheep, esp. the sheep tick, Melophagus ovinus; = sheep-fag n. at sheep n. Compounds 2. Now rare. ΘΚΠ the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Diptera or flies > [noun] > suborder Cyclorrhapha > group Pupipara or Nymphipara > family Hippoboscidae > melophagus ovinus (sheep-tick) sheep-louse14.. sheep-tickc1425 ked1570 sheep-fly1658 fag1788 1788 J. Banks Let. in Ann. Reg. 1789 (1792) Useful Projects 71/1 The use of it..preserved the animal from being vexed either with the scab or faggs. 1863 J. Gamgee Our Domest. Animals Health & Dis. xiv. 210 The ticks, keds, or fags which are found on the skins of horses, cattle, sheep, and dogs, are parasitic species of the genus Ixodes or Ricinus of Latreille. 1871 Entomologist 5 307 In a badly-fed and neglected flock the fags increase rapidly. 1919 K. Winslow & A. Eichhorn Vet. Materia Medica & Therapeutics (ed. 8) 590 Melophagus ovinus, commonly called the ‘sheeptick’, ked or fag. 2010 P. Marren & R. Mabey Bugs Britannica 120/2 Ticks Acarina. vn [vernacular names]: fags, kebs (Orkney), keds, sheep lice, sheep pest, sheep-taids, taids. CompoundsΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > sheep-farming > [noun] > sheep washing or dipping > sheep-wash or -dip sheep-watera1722 fag water1848 sheep-wash1858 sheep-dip1865 dip1871 wash1933 1792 W. Redhead Observ. Different Breeds Sheep 40 Have a wash, called fag watering, composed of soap and mercury, for killing the fags.] 1848 Express 22 July 4/2 The prisoner, who was a servant of the prosecutrix, gave in some milk a mixture used for sheep, called ‘fag-water’, which consisted of arsenic, soft soap, and water. 1856 Spirit of Times 27 Dec. 549/1 Dipping in, or dressing with fag-water preparations, is conducive to the growth of the fleece. 1874 Lancaster Farmer Sept. 211/1 The lambs are sprinkled over with arsenical water (‘fag water’), but I do not think it is so effectual, as dipping. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online June 2022). † fagn.2 Obsolete. 1. fag feathers n. rare the secondary flight feathers of a hawk's wing; = flag n.3 1a. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > support > hanging or suspension > [noun] > that which hangs or is suspended > loosely fag feathers1486 flapa1529 lappet1677 flapper1854 flop1900 1486 Bk. St. Albans sig. bj The federis at the wynges next the body be calde the flagg or the fagg federis. 2. a. The end of a roll or bale of cloth, often woven more coarsely or of lower quality material than the rest, and sometimes hanging loose; a piece of this. Occasionally as a mass noun: cloth of this type. Also more generally: a scrap of cloth, a rag. Cf. fag end n. 2a.In quot. 1659 in figurative context. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > incompleteness > part of whole > that which is left or remainder > [noun] > remaining fragment stobc1420 end1481 stump1516 fragment1531 stuba1533 remainder?1570 remain1572 fag1582 snub1590 remnant1597 butt1612 heeltap1776 hagsnar1796 tag-end1807 shank1828 nuba1834 nubbin1857 snar1892 1582 Will of John Chappell P.R.O.: PROB 11/64/12 f. 12v To Mr Roger Massye..a white fagge to make him a cote. 1659 T. Fuller Appeal Iniured Innocence ii. 86 When I first took up this resolution to present the Animadvertors whole Cloth, List, Fagg and all, I aimed not at his damage, but my own defence. 1779 ‘Peeping Tim’ Honest London Spy 137 I don' like it at all; this is bale fag trimmed with silk lace. 1824 E. Copley Old Man's Head 87 I had hitherto been accustomed to confine the idea..of fag to certain ragged ends of linen, or silk, which my mother had sometimes given to my sister Jane for patchwork. 1880 Rep. Consuls U.S. on Commerce (U.S. Dept. of State) No. 1. 97 Silk fags, oil silk, fringes, tassels, and gimp for furniture. b. Originally and chiefly Nautical. The end of a piece of rope, esp. when untwisted or unravelled; = fag end n. 2b. ΚΠ 1750 T. R. Blanckley Naval Expositor 54 Fagg, the End of those Strands which do not go through the Tops, when a Cable or Rope is closed, are called Faggs. 1825 J. Budge Pract. Miner's Guide. 95 From the end, or fag of the rope, cut several of the yarns in fathom lengths. 1844 Gen. Instr. Officers in Her Majesty's Dock-yards xvii. 153 You are to cause the Faggs, cut from the ends of new Cables and other new Cordage, to be knotted together. 3. figurative. The last part or remnant of anything; the very end; (hence) the most worthless part, the dregs. Cf. fag end n. 1. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > end or conclusion > [noun] > the very end last end?c1225 the farc1540 the far endc1540 faga1627 the last word1842 the end of the road1954 endsville1962 the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > end or conclusion > [noun] > the latter part > mere butt end1597 fag endc1600 faga1627 tag-end1807 rag enda1869 a1627 T. Middleton & W. Rowley Changeling (1653) iii. sig. E3 To finish (as it were) and make the fagg Of all the Revels. a1664 M. Frank LI Serm. (1672) 112 The lag and fag of all, a very scum of men. 1687 T. Beverley Expos. Song of Songs ii. 20 If us no other Answer can attone, Doth not our Lord in Prophecy cut short The Note curtaill'd Fag of Time? 4. English regional (midlands). Long coarse grass; (also, chiefly in old fag) tufts or areas of old pasture grass remaining uneaten. Cf. fog n.1 1. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by habit > herb or herbaceous plant > [noun] > herbage or grass > tall or coarse thatch1622 fag1854 1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words I. 217 Fag, long coarse grass. The more common form of this word is fog. 1880 Morning Post 10 Feb. 7/6 There is here and there a bit of fag grass, but pastures are very bare. 1884 R. Lawson Upton-on-Severn Words & Phrases Fag, generally Old Fag, tufts of last year's grass not eaten down. 1898 F. W. M. Woodward in Eng. Dial. Dict. (at cited word) Nothing but old fag. 5. Perhaps: a strip of a crop remaining unharvested. N.E.D. (1894) defined this sense as ‘An odd strip of land’. ΚΠ 1880 Times 17 Sept. 8/5 The fags along the sides of the river are being irretrievably damaged. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2021). fagn.3 1. a. A person (esp. a junior member of a group or set) who performs menial tasks, runs errands, etc., for another or others when required. Also more generally: a person likened to a schoolboy fag (see sense 1b) in some way.In quot. 1924 of an animal. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to conditions > [noun] > drudge or slave-labourer slave-labourer1607 fag1770 slave1774 sweatee1889 task-labourer1897 1770 C. Burney Jrnl. 15 Dec. in H. E. Poole Music, Men, & Manners France & Italy (1969) 226 He seems the youngest of these literary gentlemen, and the fag. 1813 P. Hawker Diary 7 Jan. (1893) I. 66 Mr. Macintosh..a good fag. a1839 W. M. Praed Poems (1864) II. 115 William Tag, Thalia's most industrious fag. 1854 W. M. Thackeray Newcomes I. xviii. 171 The diminutive fag of the studio. 1924 Quiver Nov. 52/1 The dead stag had served, as it were, as fag to the finer beast. 1959 Times 23 Sept. 3/7 The champion of last year..was beaten in the quarter final round by Anderson, one of the fags, shall we say, of the group. 2012 Belfast Tel. (Nexis) 1 May 29 We didn't really know what to make of David Cameron and his fag George Osborne. b. School slang. Esp. in certain British independent boarding schools for boys: a junior pupil who is expected to carry out tasks or chores for a senior pupil or pupils. Now chiefly historical.Although first attested slightly later than sense 1a, it is possible that this is the earliest sense of the word. ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > service > servant > types of servant > [noun] > pupil at public school fag1790 society > education > learning > learner > one attending school > [noun] > schoolboy > fag fag1790 1790 R. Cumberland Observer V. cxxix. 32 I had the character at school of being the very best fag that ever came into it. 1809 M. Pilkington Ill-fated Mariner i. 8 As submission was forced, and the orders he received executed with ill-humour, he was made completely sensible of the degrading situation of a fag. 1869 H. E. H. Jerningham tr. T. Guiccioli My Recoll. Ld. Byron I. v. 129 A certain Mr. Peel ordered his fag, Lord Gort, to make him some toast for tea. 1930 Manch. Guardian 10 May 18/6 Upon the shout of a prefect all the fags within call were expected to run. 2017 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 27 Jan. 27 Tam was educated at Eton—where he was fag to Nicholas Ridley. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > cricketer > [noun] > fielder seeker-out1744 fieldsman1772 fieldman1773 field1816 fielder1824 scout1824 fag1825 watch1836 leather-hunter1944 1825 New Monthly Mag. 13 498 The success of the stroke which sent it from the full pitch to the utmost limits of the long fag's range. 1897 W. J. Ford in K. S. Ranjitsinhji Jubilee Bk. Cricket ix. 343 The ‘fags’ in the out-field have their hands full indeed. 1902 H. N. Birt Downside viii. 302 ‘The middle up or chestnut fag’ and ‘middle down or library window fag’ would require explaining at Lord's. 2. colloquial. A tiring or unwelcome task; hard work, toil, drudgery. Also: exhaustion, fatigue (cf. brain fag n.). ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > effort or exertion > [noun] > labour or toil > wearisome or unrewarding drudgery1548 slavery1551 droiling1607 sluttery1615 under-drudgery1625 drudging1634 droila1644 fag1780 scrubbery1783 stodge1846 buggerlugging1878 1780 C. A. Burney Jrnl. 13 Apr. in F. Burney Early Jrnls. & Lett. (2003) IV. 55 This was my fag till after Tea. 1798 Ld. Nelson Lett. (1814) II. 233 As no fleet has more fag than this, nothing but the..greatest attention can keep them healthy. 1847 J. W. Carlyle Lett. II. 8 Not worth the fag of going and coming. 1860 W. H. Dixon Personal Hist. Ld. Bacon x. §19 The fag and contest of the world. 1904 B. S. Blumberg et al. in Jrnl. Amer. Med. Assoc. 20 Feb. 501/1 The brain cells are in a state of fatigue, of fag. 1932 P. G. Wodehouse Let. 8 Apr. in Yours, Plum (1990) 140 It's a Jeeves novel and ought to be easy to write, but so far has proved a ghastly fag. 1969 Guardian 17 Sept. 9/2 The stool..saves all the fag of fetching and carrying steps. 2007 West Briton (Nexis) 4 Jan. 23 Sending Christmas cards isn't that much of a fag. Compounds General attributive and appositive (chiefly in sense 1), as fag system, fag duty, etc. ΚΠ 1819 Morning Chron. 10 Nov. The fag-system in the public schools of England. 1828 T. Aird in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Dec. 713/1 A fag partner at whist when a better fourth hand is wanting. 1885 Pall Mall Gaz. 27 May 6/1 Far more exhausting than a fag day of five hours at Rugby. 1906 School Jrnl. 22 Sept. 220/1 New boys at Charterhouse are allowed a fortnight's grace before they are put to fag-duty. 1922 Sunset Mag. Dec. 25/1 If you want somebody to do the fag work out of hours, call on me. 2015 D. Turner Old Boys v. 147 The survival of the fag system fostered opportunities for a good deal of cruelty and humiliation in boarding schools. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). fagn.4 slang (originally and chiefly British). 1. A cigarette; (in early use) spec. †a cheap one (obsolete). ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > articles or materials used in smoking > [noun] > thing which may be smoked > cigarette cigarito1832 paper cigar1833 cigarette1842 papelito1845 coffin-nailc1865 fag1885 butt1893 pill1901 scag1915 nail1925 quirly1932 tab1934 burn1941 draw1946 tube1946 snout1950 cancer stick1958 straight1959 ciggy1962 square1970 bifter1989 lung dart1990 dart2000 the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > articles or materials used in smoking > [noun] > thing which may be smoked > cigarette > cheap fag1885 woodbine1907 gasper1914 1885 Pall Mall Gaz. 15 Oct. 1/2 Thousands of lads come out..to talk filth, to call one another foul names, to smoke ‘fags’ and clay pipes. 1898 Eng. Dial. Dict. (at cited word) Here [i.e. at Redruth] we are often asked by youngsters to ‘chuck’ them ‘a fag’—and whole cheap cigarettes are also often called fags. 1912 A. Ollivant Royal Road i. v. 48 His finger-tips were brown with rolling fags: for he never smoked a pipe. 1942 C. Barrett On Wallaby v. 97 Cobbers [i.e. friends] of the men in detention had hit upon an ingenious method of smuggling fags to them. 2010 Herald Express (Torquay) (Nexis) 23 Jan. 19 Mam..took off her apron, lit a fag and had a cup of tea. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > articles or materials used in smoking > [noun] > thing which may be smoked > cigar or cigarette > butt or end of doup1710 butt end1827 old soldier1834 butt1847 stub1855 cigar-end1870 stub-end1875 cigarette-end1889 cigar-butt1891 snipe1891 fag end1892 fag1897 bumper1899 scag1915 cigarette-butt1923 dout1928 dog-end1934 roach1939 stompie1947 1897 Dundee Courier & Argus 11 Nov. 5/7 (headline) Death from excessive smoking. Boys and cigar ‘fags’. 1908 Church Times 7 Feb. 173/1 He gathered into a leather pouch the remains of his cigarettes, and left the room. ‘What does he do with all those fags?’ asked Conway. 1921 J. Galsworthy To Let iii. viii. 284 The fag of Fleur's cigarette..fell on the grass. Compounds C1. General attributive. ΚΠ 1891 Essex Standard 21 Feb. 7/3 He gave defendant a ‘fag paper’. 1918 J. Martin Diary 30 Mar. in Sapper Martin (2010) 196 The ‘fag issue’ today has produced some tobacco for which I am grateful. 1922 C. Somerville Shriek iii. 37 Mauve fag smoke wreathing her pruned, red locks. 1978 Observer 3 Sept. 4/5 The floor..littered with food and fag packets. 2007 M. Hardy Worthless (2008) 144 I spent the whole morning sitting with Dad, apart from frequent loo breaks and odd fag breaks. C2. fag ash n. cigarette ash.Recorded earliest in Fag Ash Lil as the name of a grey racehorse; cf. fag ash Lil n. ΚΠ 1960 Times 24 Mar. 18/1 Also ran:–Fireflacht (4th), Night o'Love, Lyre, Velocette, Europa, Fag Ash Lil. 1971 Jrnl. Gypsy Lore Soc. 50 131 T: ‘An' they brung the food up, an' now what was in the food?’ W: ‘Fag ash?’. 1991 New Direct. 55 92 Is it the smell of fag-ash in my hair next day? 2017 Times (Nexis) 8 Apr. You look in their kitchen bins and you see bottles, newspapers, pizza boxes, turnip peelings and chicken bones all mixed in there with the fag ash. fag butt n. the end of a smoked cigarette; cf. butt n.6 3b(a). ΚΠ 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. v. [Lotus Eaters] 68 Smoking a chewed fagbutt. 1963 McKean County Democrat (Smethport, Pa.) 24 Oct. 1/2 (headline) Blame carelessly tossed fag butt for woods fire. 2012 W. Cohu Wolf Pit (2013) 75 He had an old estate car..full of empty Coke bottles and fag butts. fag card n. now historical a small collectable card with a picture on it, formerly included in packets of cigarettes; = cigarette card n. at cigarette n. Compounds 2. ΚΠ 1912 Middlesex Gaz. 29 June 8/1 Got any fag cards, guvnor? 1959 W. Golding Free Fall ii. 49 There was the business of the fagcards. We all collected them. 2000 Z. Smith White Teeth (2001) v. 96 Archie handed over a fag-card of Dorothy Lamour that had been..in his back pocket ever since he joined up. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). fagn.5adj. North American slang (derogatory and offensive). A. n.5 A homosexual man, sometimes spec. one considered to be effeminate. Also more generally: any man who is considered effeminate; (as a term of abuse or contempt) a weak or cowardly man or boy; a sissy. Cf. faggot n. 8c.Dated to 1905 in E. Partridge Slang To-day & Yesterday (1937) (in ed. 1 (1933) dated to 1915), but without supporting evidence. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual orientation > homosexuality > [noun] > a homosexual person > male badlingeOE nan1670 molly1708 Miss Molly1754 Miss Nancy1824 molly mop1829 poof1833 Margery?c1855 Mary Ann1868 pretty-boy1881 cocksucker1885 poofter1889 queer1894 fruit1895 fairy1896 homosexualist1898 puff1902 pussy1904 nance1910 quean1910 girl1912 faggot1913 mouser1914 queen1919 fag1921 gay boy1921 maricon1921 pie-face1922 bitch1923 Jessie1923 tapette1923 pansy1926 nancy boy1927 nelly1931 femme1932 ponce1932 punk1933 queerie1933 gobbler1934 jocker1935 queenie1935 iron1936 freak1941 swish1941 flit1942 tonk1943 wonk1945 mother1947 fruitcake1952 Mary1953 twink1953 swishy1959 limp wrist1960 arse bandit1961 leather man1961 booty bandit1962 ginger beer1964 bummer1965 poofteroo1966 shirtlifter1966 battyman1967 dick-sucker1968 mo1968 a friend of Dorothy1972 shim1973 gaylord1976 twinkie1977 woofter1977 bender1986 knob jockey1989 batty boy1992 cake boy1992 1921 Med. Rev. of Reviews 27 369/1 Does the ‘fairy’ or ‘fag’ really exist? 1932 E. Hemingway Death in Afternoon 298 Interested parties..are continually proving that Leonardo da Vinci, Shakespeare, etc., were fags. 1979 W. Cross Kids & Booze x. 88 Abstainers [from alcohol] are often referred to with scorn by upper classmen as ‘squares’, sometimes as ‘fags’. 1980 Mother Jones Dec. 54/3 You sap, you punk, you fag... You couldn't whip my grandmother. 2011 H. Dolan Very Bad Men (2012) xlv. 304 He was never one of the guys. For a long time, I thought he was a fag. B. adj. Of, characteristic of, or associated with homosexual people, esp. men. Of a person, esp. a man: homosexual. Also more generally of any man, esp. as a term of abuse or contempt: effeminate.Some early examples may instead show use of the noun as a modifier. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual orientation > homosexuality > [adjective] > homosexual inverted1870 Uranian1883 homosexual1892 homogenic1894 camp1910 homosex1913 queer1914 homoerotic1915 homosexualist1920 homo1923 faggoty1928 tapette1930 fag1932 gay1934 so1937 same-sex1938 faggy1949 ginger beer1959 that waya1960 that way inclineda1960 ginger1965 minty1965 pink1972 leather1990 1932 Broadway Brevities 14 Mar. 1 Fag balls exposed... 6,000 crowd huge hall as queer men and women dance at 64th annual masquerade. 1939 R. Chandler Big Sleep xii. 90 A stealthy nastiness, like a fag party. 1952 J. Lait & L. Mortimer U.S.A. Confidential xi. 109 Bridgeport has a large fag population, which is understandable because of the many artistic colonies in the Fairfield County villages. 1969 H. Gold Great Amer. Jackpot iii. 35 The ones who buy fag clothes, buddy, are straight. 1990 E. Gallardo Waltz on Merry-go-round in Simpson Street & Other Plays ii. i. 104 My sons and I were right to teach them fag boys a lesson, weren't we, Jason? 2005 Time Out N.Y. 27 Oct. 90/3 A debaucherous evening of rock, trash disco, fag-punk and the like. 2012 J. Burdett Vulture Peak iii. 17 When he is among his own kind [sc. transexuals], Lek turns pretty much totally fag. Compounds fag-bash v. transitive to attack (a homosexual person, esp. a man) physically or verbally.Also occasionally intransitive. ΚΠ 1977 Metro Gay News (Michigan) June 19/3 An already ignorant society which in many cases is just waiting for an invitation to ‘queer-bait’, ‘fag-bash’ and ‘fruit-loop’. 1985 Film Comment May 73/3 The situation grows less peachy when gays are among those who fag bash, fire, evict, and laugh at the boys in the band. 2017 Austral. Financial Rev. (Nexis) 28 Jan. (Weekend Fin section) 37 In my teenage years I got fag-bashed at high school for being openly gay. fag-basher n. a person who attacks homosexual people, esp. men, physically or verbally. ΚΠ 1978 Gay Activist (N.Y.) Oct.–Nov. 4/2 The undertones of timidity..are comparable to the thought of gay church members throwing flowers at..an advancing column of ‘fag bashers’ out for their blood. 1983 Washington Post 3 Aug. a7/5 He said..he had never given speeches or been outspoken on the issue of homosexuality: ‘I have never been a “fag-basher” or “gay-baiter”.’ 2007 J. Baumgardner Look Both Ways (2008) 50 Het isn't used, nor is homo by any one other than Archie Bunker and modern-day fag bashers. fag-bashing n. the action or practice of attacking homosexual people, esp. men, physically or verbally. ΚΠ 1977 National Lampoon May 6/1 Those that indulged in ‘queer-baiting’, ‘fag-bashing’, or ‘fruit-looping’ were to be deplored. 1999 Herald (Glasgow) (Nexis) 10 June 22 Usually the fag-bashing was merely verbal; ditto, the anti-feminist attacks. 2007 W. C. Harris in Reading Brokeback Mountain ix. 123 Fag bashing is terrorist violence, visited at random on one individual. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). fagv.1 1. intransitive. To decline in vigour or strength (literal and figurative); to tire or flag after exertion; (formerly also) †to droop (obsolete). Now rare (chiefly Scottish and English regional (northern) in later use).In quot. 1952 perhaps a typographical error for flag. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > support > hanging or suspension > hang or be suspended [verb (intransitive)] > hang down falleOE depend?1518 fag1555 pend1834 the world > action or operation > inaction > not doing > abstaining or refraining from action > abstain or refrain from action [verb (intransitive)] > avoid > turn aside from a course of action wanderc897 haltc900 flitc1175 misdrawc1300 err1303 convertc1374 foldc1380 stray1390 astray1393 swaver?a1400 to fall from ——a1425 recedec1450 depart1535 swervea1547 fag1555 flinch1578 exorbitate1600 extravagate1600 discoasta1677 tralineate1700 aberrate1749 the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > weariness or exhaustion > become weary or exhausted [verb (intransitive)] wearyc890 atirec1000 tirec1000 sowp1513 inweary1611 outwear1614 jade1627 fag1722 to knock up1771 to be sinking1782 1555 J. Wilkinson tr. L. de Avila y Cuñiga Comm. Wars in Germany sig. D.vii His maiestie..seing now yt they began to fagge: he commaunded the horsmen to retier into their campe. 1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) II. 1271/2 His handes fagged downewarde. 1684 Disc. Manifestation Will of God xix. 179 Never the least qualm should be seen to come over any of their hearts, nor his courage to fagg. 1722 G. Mackenzie Lives Writers Sc. Nation III. 202 The Italian attached him with such..Eagerness, that he began to fag, having overacted himself. 1794 Har'st Rig xxxiii. 14 They never fag. 1854 Arthur's Home Mag. Apr. 295/1 He was a man of energy, and his zeal never fagged nor grew weary. 1878 W. Dickinson Gloss. Words & Phrases Cumberland (ed. 2) Fag,..to hang back. 1890 Jrnl. Sc. Meteorol. Soc. 9 71/2 Crops made great progress, but have ‘fagged’ considerably for the want of rain. 1908 J. Lumsden Doun i' th' Loudons 167 A dizziness upo' me steals, Imagination fags, an' reels. 1952 S. Foote Shiloh 181 We were beginning to fag from the ten-mile hike. 2. a. intransitive. To work hard (at something, esp. something tedious); to labour, toil; to exert oneself; to take the trouble to do something, esp. (with prepositional complement) to go somewhere which requires an effort that one is unwilling to make. Also with away, on. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > manner of action > effort or exertion > exert oneself or make an effort [verb (intransitive)] > toil sweatc897 swingc1000 swinkOE travailc1275 carka1350 tavec1350 to-swinkc1386 labourc1390 byswenke?a1400 tevelc1400 toilc1400 pingle1511 carp1522 moilc1529 turmoil1548 mucker1566 tug1619 tuggle1650 fatigue1695 hammer1755 fag1772 bullock1888 slog1888 to sweat one's guts out1890 schlep1937 slug1943 1772 F. Burney Early Jrnls. & Lett. (1988) I. 205 All Day I (a)m fagging at business. 1794 Ld. Spencer Let. 23 Dec. in Ld. Auckland Jrnl. & Corr. (1862) III. 299 Arthur Paget, on whose account I am now fagging to Berlin. 1829 W. Scott Jrnl. 14 Mar. (1946) 36 I..fagged at my Review. 1859 C. Dickens Tale of Two Cities ii. viii. 75 The Marquis in his travelling carriage..fagged up a steep hill. 1862 Sat. Rev. 8 Feb. 144 Like giving up a problem instead of fagging on till it is solved. 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. iv. [Calypso] 65 Too much trouble to fag up the stairs to the landing. 2016 A. Masters Life Discarded 150 Fagged away at laundry—it would have been better to have put it in the washing-machine. b. intransitive. English regional (Worcestershire). spec. To pull hard, strain. rare. ΚΠ 1884 R. Lawson Upton-on-Severn Words & Phrases 14 Fag..to pull hard as at a rope. 3. a. transitive. To cause (a person, animal, or part of the body) to become tired; to fatigue, wear out. Also reflexive: to tire oneself (out).In quot. 1774 probably: to hinder, obstruct. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sleeping and waking > weariness or exhaustion > weary or exhaust [verb (transitive)] wearyc897 tirea1000 travailc1300 forwearya1325 taryc1375 tarc1440 matec1450 break1483 labour1496 overwearya1500 wear?1507 to wear out, forth1525 fatigate1535 stress1540 overtire1558 forwaste1563 to tire out1563 overwear1578 spend1582 out-tire1596 outwear1596 outweary1596 overspend1596 to toil out1596 attediate1603 bejade1620 lassate1623 harassa1626 overtask1628 tax1672 hag1674 trash1685 hatter1687 overtax1692 fatigue1693 to knock up1740 tire to death1740 overfatigue1741 fag1774 outdo1776 to do over1789 to use up1790 jade1798 overdo1817 frazzlea1825 worry1828 to sew up1837 to wear to death1840 to take it (also a lot, too much, etc.) out of (a person)1847 gruel1850 to stump up1853 exhaust1860 finish1864 peter1869 knacker1886 grind1887 tew1893 crease1925 poop1931 raddle1951 1774 D. Graham Impartial Hist. Rebellion (ed. 3) ix. 86 Th' English women not us'd with wading..Went in with petticoats and all, Which fagg'd their feet and made them fall. 1793 Gentleman's Mag. Sept. 782/2 It was the length of time they had been under arms which had fagged the men so much. 1826 W. Scott Jrnl. 9 Apr. (1939) 152 I worked at..correcting manuscript, which fags me excessively. 1898 Reservation Certain Lands Calif. (55th Congr. U.S. Senate, 2nd Session) 6 They drove those cattle down this Mineral Kind road until they fagged them out. 1913 E. Wharton Custom of Country ii. xiii. 186 I'd been to all this bother—fagging myself to death about all these things. 1990 Independent (Nexis) 28 Mar. 30 The first time I saw Michael he was flying around the ring, fagging himself out. 2017 D. E. Tomlinson Midnight Man 201 Even those paltry goals have fagged him out more than normal. b. transitive. In passive. To be willing to make the required effort; to be bothered. Usually in negative constructions, as can't be fagged. Frequently with infinitive or present participle as complement. Cf. bother v. 3b. ΚΠ 1927 Sackbut Jan. 165 Finding the pail empty, he felt he couldn't be fagged to go to the brook again. 1996 Big Issue 2 May 20/3 He goes to bed at 7.30, so we try to get out at 7.45, charge like mad to get somewhere... I can never be fagged really. 2008 Times 26 Jan. 84/2 No one can be fagged with planting at this time. 4. School slang (originally and chiefly in certain British independent boarding schools for boys). Now historical and rare. a. transitive. Of a senior pupil: to make (a junior pupil) one's fag (fag n.3 1b). Also: to compel (a junior pupil) to carry out a task or chore.Also with complement indicating the nature of the task or chore. ΘΚΠ society > education > educational administration > school administration > [verb (transitive)] > compel to fag fag1786 1786 Advice Clergy of Every Denomination & Degree ii. 31 The power of fagging, kicking, and cuffing, the underlings. 1824 R. Southey in C. C. Southey Life & Corr. R. Southey (1849) I. 138 He was not high enough in the school to fag me. 1857 T. Hughes Tom Brown's School Days i. viii. 186 What right have the fifth-form boys to fag us. 1889 A. R. Hope in Boy's Own Paper 699/2 He used to fag me to blow the chapel organ for him. 1922 S. Leslie Oppidan i. 12 Upper Fifth condescend to fag and belabour Lower Boys. 1955 C. S. Lewis Surprised by Joy vi. 96 This could be done only if one escaped being fagged as a shoeblack. 1987 R. Fiennes Living Dangerously iii. 16 He who arrived last was fagged. b. intransitive. To act as a fag (for a senior pupil). Also in extended use: to carry out menial tasks or run errands (for a person). ΘΚΠ society > authority > subjection > service > servant > types of servant > [verb (intransitive)] > serve another pupil at school fag1806 1806 J. Beresford Miseries Human Life I. iii. 52 Fagging for a niggardly glutton. 1857 T. Hughes Tom Brown's School Days i. viii. 187 I won't fag except for the sixth. 1908 Pall Mall Mag. Oct. 462/1 I can only remember one case of a new boy refusing to fag. 1919 L. Perry Romantic Liar xv. 220 His secretary was taken ill the first week, and I have been quite useful to him, fagging for him like a pup. 2010 Mirror (Nexis) 20 Apr. 21 Theroux ‘fagged’ for Lib Dem's great hope at Westminster School. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > fielding > field [verb (intransitive)] stop1744 scout1786 to watch out1786 field1798 to look out1836 to fag out1839 to seek out1840 1839 Bentley's Misc. July 648 I merely wish to return thanks for the kind manner in which the grown-up people have made me a member of their cricket clubs, and the little boys stayed away from school on purpose to ‘fag out’ for me. 1860 W. M. Thackeray On Joke in Roundabout Papers 89 The ground where you had to fag out on holidays. 1908 Country Life 8 Aug. p. xliv/1 The innattentive [sic] fieldsman who was thinking of home or birds'-nesting when he was fagging out at cricket. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † fagv.2 slang (originally cant). Obsolete. transitive. To beat, thrash. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > impact > striking > beating or repeated striking > beat [verb (transitive)] > specifically a person to-beatc893 threshOE bustc1225 to lay on or upon?c1225 berrya1250 to-bunea1250 touchc1330 arrayc1380 byfrapc1380 boxc1390 swinga1400 forbeatc1420 peal?a1425 routa1425 noddlea1450 forslinger1481 wipe1523 trima1529 baste1533 waulk1533 slip1535 peppera1550 bethwack1555 kembc1566 to beat (a person) black and blue1568 beswinge1568 paik1568 trounce1568 canvass1573 swaddle?1577 bebaste1582 besoop1589 bumfeage1589 dry-beat1589 feague1589 lamback1589 clapperclaw1590 thrash1593 belam1595 lam1595 beswaddle1598 bumfeagle1598 belabour1600 tew1600 flesh-baste1611 dust1612 feeze1612 mill1612 verberate1614 bethumpa1616 rebuke1619 bemaul1620 tabor1624 maula1627 batterfang1630 dry-baste1630 lambaste1637 thunder-thump1637 cullis1639 dry-banga1640 nuddle1640 sauce1651 feak1652 cotton1654 fustigate1656 brush1665 squab1668 raddle1677 to tan (a person's) hide1679 slam1691 bebump1694 to give (a person) his load1694 fag1699 towel1705 to kick a person's butt1741 fum1790 devel1807 bray1808 to beat (also scare, etc.) someone's daylights out1813 mug1818 to knock (a person) into the middle of next week1821 welt1823 hidea1825 slate1825 targe1825 wallop1825 pounce1827 to lay into1838 flake1841 muzzle1843 paste1846 looder1850 frail1851 snake1859 fettle1863 to do over1866 jacket1875 to knock seven kinds of —— out of (a person)1877 to take apart1880 splatter1881 to beat (knock, etc.) the tar out of1884 to —— the shit out of (a person or thing)1886 to do up1887 to —— (the) hell out of1887 to beat — bells out of a person1890 soak1892 to punch out1893 stoush1893 to work over1903 to beat up1907 to punch up1907 cream1929 shellac1930 to —— the bejesus out of (a person or thing)1931 duff1943 clobber1944 to fill in1948 to bash up1954 to —— seven shades of —— out of (a person or thing)1976 to —— seven shades out of (a person or thing)1983 beast1990 becurry- fan- 1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Fag, to Beat. 1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Fag the Fen, drub the Whore. 1723 M. Browne Polidus ii. i. 21 I long to be fagging her slender Sides. 1772 T. Bridges Burlesque Transl. Homer (rev. ed.) iii. 109 Talthibious to the boats did run, To fetch for Jove a hot cross-bun; Knowing their bones he'd soon be fagging, Should they not keep his chaps a wagging. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online September 2019). fagv.3 Originally and chiefly Nautical. ΚΠ 1799 Village Messenger (Amherst, New Hampsh.) 21 Sept. 3/3 The Boatswain's Mate..began to beat him..until the rope was fagged out about eight or nine inches in length. 1833 Morning Post 28 Mar. 6/5 There was a stick about perhaps a yard long, and with one or two little tails of line, partly fagged out at the ends. 1849 Daily News 31 Mar. 7/5 A rope about an inch thick was produced by the inspector, with which the child said his father had beaten him until he ‘fagged’ the ends of it. 1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. 285 Fag out..to wear out the end of a rope or end of canvas. 1888 Daily Picayune (New Orleans) 13 May 16/4 I had made the best job I could out of a rope which was quite fagged out. 2. intransitive. With out. Of a rope: to untwist or unravel at the end. Cf. fag n.2 2b. Now rare. ΚΠ 1804 C. Romme Dictionnaire Marine Anglaise Fag out, on exprime ainsi l'état de l'extrémité d'un cordage dont les torons sont décommis. 1807 J. H. Moore New Pract. Navigator (ed. 17) 291 Whipping, to bind twine round the ends of ropes, to hinder them from fagging out. 1860 A. H. Alston Seamanship 145 They will lie flat along the line, and run no risk of fagging out, or being torn off. 1902 Encycl. Brit. XXI. 593/1 The end of every working rope should at least be whipped to prevent it fagging out. 1942 Mich. Roads & Constr. 13 Aug. 3 (advt.) Ordinary rope fags out. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). fagv.4 Chiefly English regional (southern and midlands). Now rare. transitive. To cut (a cereal crop or stubble) down to the ground, esp. by chopping with a fagging hook (fagging hook n. (a) at fagging n.3 Compounds); to reap (a cereal crop) using a sickle or fagging hook. Cf. bag v.2 ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > farming > cultivation or tillage > cultivation of plants or crops > harvesting > harvest (a crop) [verb (transitive)] > reap or mow a crop > with a sickle sheara1325 fag1807 sickle1922 1807 [implied in: J. Middleton View Agric. Middlesex (ed. 2) vii. 216 The operation of reaping is performed by cutting the crop down by a succession of blows, made within two or three inches of the ground. This the farmers call bagging (fagging). (at fagging n.3)]. 1841 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 2 i. 120 Six ridges..were harvested separately, being fagged or cut at the ground. 1854 Jrnl. Royal Agric. Soc. 15 i. 213 Some farmers fag a large quantity of barley. 1880 Newcastle Courant 20 Aug. 3/1 Wheat is reaped, or fagged, tied, and shoked at 12s. to 16s. per acre. 1959 Recorded Interview (Brit. Libr. Sound Archive) (Survey Eng. Dial.: C908) (MS transcript) Track 23 They used to..fag it by hand—the women you used to tie it. Compounds fag-hook n. now chiefly historical (a) a heavy, short-handled tool similar to a sickle but without a serrated edge; = fagging hook n. (a) at fagging n.3 Compounds; (b) a hooked stick with which stalks of a cereal crop are drawn towards the person harvesting (also used in hedge trimming, etc.); = fagging hook n. (b) at fagging n.3 Compounds. ΚΠ 1870 Hampshire Tel. & Sussex Chron. 18 June 6/5 John Silvester..was charged with stealing a prong and a fag hook. 1896 M. J. Bacon in P. H. Ditchfield Bygone Berks. 239 A fag-hook, or fagging-hook, is a crooked stick used instead of the left hand in clearing a bank of nettles, etc., with an iron hook. 1899 New Eng. Mag. Apr. 331/2 Two old fellows with fag-hooks were reaping the grass left by the machines along the hedges. 1921 E. Leadbitter Shepherd's Warning ii. ii. 85 It has bin a rare year for the corn... My old fag-hook, he en't hardly wanted. 1980 D. Thompson Change & Trad. in Rural Eng. 27 I viewed the old tools—hoes and spades and scythes and fag-hooks—with quickened interest. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). fagv.5 slang (originally U.S.). 1. transitive. To supply (a person) with a cigarette. disused. ΚΠ 1926 G. H. Maines & B. Grant Wise-crack Dict. 8/1 Fag me, give me a cigarette. 1954 W. Faulkner Fable (1955) 324 ‘Fag me again.’ The corporal gave him another cigarette. 2. intransitive. To smoke. Also transitive with it. Now chiefly British. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > tobacco > smoking > smoke [verb (intransitive)] whiff1602 smoke1617 to blow (raise obs.) a cloud1699 drawa1774 smook1805 blow1808 to have (or take) a smoke1835 tobacconize1876 shoch1898 inhale1933 fag1940 to have a burn1941 1940 Amer. Speech 15 335/2 To smoke is..to fag. 1997 J. Hawes Rancid Aluminium (1998) iii. 67 These two fat little sixteen-year-olds..came waddling out straight into the road, mouthing and fagging away. 2002 Observer 29 Dec. i. 15/1 It's usually only me fagging it before the meal. 2013 C. Tsiolkas Barracuda (2014) 177 ‘I'm working out.’ She ruefully eyes the cigarette in her fingers. ‘But I'm still fucking fagging.’ This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11463n.21486n.31770n.41885n.5adj.1921v.11555v.21699v.31799v.41807v.51926 |
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