单词 | sag |
释义 | sagn.1 Now dialect. = sedge n.1 ΘΚΠ the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > a grass or grasses > reedy or aquatic grasses > [noun] > sedges starc1300 carexa1398 float-grassc1440 red sedge1480 sag1531 pry grassa1600 flea-grass1670 star-grass1782 sedge1785 sea sedge1796 sharp-pry-grass1803 blue star grass1807 whip-grass1814 flea-sedge1816 saw-grass1822 mud rush1824 tight-locka1825 nut grass1830 razor grass1834 twig-rush1836 nut rush1843 sand grass1856 mud sedge1859 niggerhead1859 nutsedge1861 pingao1867 sword-rush1875 tupak-grass1884 tussock-sedge1884 sennegrass1897 nigger's-head1921 1531 Lett. & Papers Henry VIII V. 184 Payment to James Hole for sagge. 1531 Lett. & Papers Henry VIII V. 186 Paide to James Hole, of Collam, for saggde for the brykmakrs..for savyng of the brykkes. Paide to Mychell Bynde for reede for the saide brykmakers. 1598 J. Florio Worlde of Wordes Flags, sags, or reeds growing by the water side. 1653 T. Barker Art of Angling 9 Leave about a yard, either to tye a bunch of Sags, or a Bladder, to Boy up the Fish. 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory (1905) iv. iv. 299/1 A Pond or pitt of water surrounded with Reeds and Sagges Vert. 1893 P. H. Emerson On Eng. Lagoons 118 They say eels are hid up this weather..but these weren't... I think they must have worked out of the sags (hovers). Compounds C1. attributive and in other combinations, as sag-bed, sag-bottomed, sag-seated; ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > landscape > marsh, bog, or swamp > [noun] > with reeds reesk1458 juncary1613 sag-bed1672 tule marsh1850 tule swamp1883 society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > furniture and fittings > seat > chair > [adjective] > types of chair caned1696 rush-bottomed1696 rush-bottom1729 roundabout chair1741 leather-bottomed1783 stick-back1783 poker-backed1830 flag-bottomed1840 claw-footed1858 seatless1871 cane-bottomed1877 cane-seated1881 sag-seated1890 sit-up1891 slat-back1891 sag-bottomed1893 spindle-back1896 shield-back1897 Carver1902 basket-bodied1903 panel-back1904 Cromwellian1905 hooped-back1906 saddle-backed1910 hard-arsed1933 sling-back1948 X-frame1955 hard-arse1964 1672 W. Hughes Amer. Physitian 28 Like those Sag-beds which grow many together in some..boggy places in England. 1735 W. Somervile Chace iv. 396 Ah! on that yielding Sag-bed, see, once more His Seal I view. 1890 J. D. Robertson Gloss. Words County of Gloucester Sag-seated chair, a rush-bottomed chair. 1893 J. Salisbury Gloss. Words S.E. Worcs. App. Sags, rushes; used for the seats of chairs, such chairs being called ‘sag-bottomed chairs’. C2. ΘΚΠ society > communication > indication > insignia > heraldic devices collective > representations of vegetation > [noun] > other vegetation pease ricea1325 garbc1460 gourd1513 sengreenc1550 orme1688 sag-spear1688 sedge1688 grain-tree1780 pea-rice1780 scrog1780 1688 R. Holme Acad. Armory (1905) iv. v. 310/2 On a crowne three sagge-speares in Triangle O. tyed together with a Rubin G. the ends extended. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1909; most recently modified version published online March 2022). sagn.2 The action of sagging. 1. Nautical. Movement or tendency to leeward. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > directing or managing a ship > [noun] > course > deviation or drift sag1589 leeway1669 drift1671 driftway1721 leeward-way1727 sagging1769 driftage1862 society > travel > travel by water > action or motion of vessel > [noun] > ability to answer helm > tendency to go off course sag1589 weather-helm1691 griping1769 slackness1877 lee-helm1883 weathercocking1952 1589 W. Borough in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations ii. 458 It is very necessarie that you doe note at the ende of euery 4. glasses, what way the shippe hath made..and howe her way hath bene through the water, considering withall for the sagge of the sea, to leewards, accordingly as you shall finde it growen. 1882 Daily Tel. 2 Sept. (Casell) Shoving through it very slowly, with a surprising sag to leeward. 2. In a rope, wire, etc. supported at two points: The dip below the horizontal line, due to its weight; the perpendicular distance from its lowest point to the straight line between the points of support. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > support > hanging or suspension > [noun] > and supported at two points > distance below horizontal sag1861 1861 Ann. Reg. 73 The ‘sag’ or droop of the cable from a straight line is 12 feet. 1889 W. H. Preece & J. Maier Telephone 136 A consideration which is of the highest importance for telephonic networks of wire is the length of the sag, or dip, of the wires between two supports. 1892 C. T. Dent et al. Mountaineering (Badminton Libr. of Sports & Pastimes) iv. 104 The rope..should stretch from one waistloop to the next without any sag at all. 3. a. A sinking or subsidence; quasi-concrete a place where the surface has subsided, a depression. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > landscape > low land > hollow or depression > [noun] pathOE slackc1400 navela1425 trough1513 nook1555 falling1565 swale1584 hella1653 depression1665 holl1701 sag1727 dip1783 recession1799 holler1845 sike1859 sitch1888 sulcus1901 1727 in Amer. Speech (1940) 15 387/1 Thence along the North Side of the Mountains to a Corner Several Saplins by a Sagg. 1850 Ann. Rep. Commissioner Patents 1849: Agric. 443 in U.S. Congress. Serial Set (31st Congr., 1st Sess.: House of Representatives Executive Doc. 20, Pt. 2) VI Strawberries are met with..on the edges of ‘sloughs’ or ‘saggs’. 1872 C. King Mountaineering in Sierra Nevada viii. 167 A gray canopy of cloud which stretched from wall to wall, hanging down here and there in deep blue sags. 1874 R. W. Raymond Statistics Mines & Mining 324 To cross with pipes a ‘sag’ in the divide 280 feet deep and..eight miles wide from one crest to the other. 1888 ‘P. Cushing’ Blacksmith of Voe I. ii. 61 There was a deep sag in the seat, which, however, added to the comfort of sitting in it. 1892 C. Lapworth in Proc. Geog. Soc. 689 Where the great continental sag sinks below the ocean level. b. figurative. ΚΠ 1868 W. James Let. 15 May in R. B. Perry Thought & Char. W. James (1935) I. 512 Such an event rather dislocates my mind from its habitual ‘sag’ in contemplating the world. 1938 E. Bowen Death of Heart iii. i. 323 Behind the opaqueness of her features control permitted no sag of tiredness. 4. Commerce. A decline in price, in a business, or in a programme of development. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > monetary value > price > fluctuation in price > [noun] > decline in prices fall1551 falling1571 sag1891 rolling back1942 turnback1977 society > trade and finance > management of money > management of national resources > [noun] > political economy > states or trends of the economy inflation1821 economic cycle1832 recovery1843 downdraught1852 perfect competition1853 downturn1858 softness1872 slump1888 downtrend1890 sag1891 under-consumption1895 recession1905 downdrift1906 economic recession1908 air pocket1913 stickiness1913 trough1916 deflation1920 downswing1922 slowdown1922 scissors1924 scissors crisis1925 uptrend1926 reflation1932 depresh1933 upswing1934 stagnation1938 countercycle1944 fiscal cliff1957 turn-down1957 stagflation1965 soft landing1973 slumpflation1974 downer1976 1891 Daily News 4 Mar. 2/2 In the American market there is a slight but general ‘sag’. 1897 E. Hough Story of Cowboy 334 Then in time came..the ‘sag’ in the cattle business. 1946 Sun (Baltimore) 20 Aug. 8/2 (heading) The sag in the housing program. a1974 R. Crossman Diaries (1975) I. 555 The Chancellor had cut back local-authority spending on mortgages... In that case, I said, he must permit us to use public-sector building to make up for the sag. Compounds attributive and in other combinations. Sagbag n. the proprietary name of an informal chair consisting of a large bag filled with polystyrene granules which accommodates itself to the form of the sitter. ΘΚΠ society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > furniture and fittings > support or rest > [noun] > cushion > floor cushion boss1694 floor cushion1839 puff1877 zabuton1879 pouf1884 beanbag1969 Sagbag1974 1974 Observer 13 Jan. 23/6 (caption) Polystyrene sagbag in various colours of canvas..from..Habitat. 1974 Trade Marks Jrnl. 18 Dec. 2520/2 Sagbag... Furniture; chairs and settees: seats and seating…cushions (not for medical or surgical purposes);..Habitat Designs Limited, Hithercroft Road, Wallingford, Berkshire; Merchants. 1978 Evening Standard 28 Apr. 18/4 June Mendoza's picture of La Rippon, shoeless in a denim jump-suit and reclining fetchingly in a purplish sag-bag. sagbag n. sagbend n. the curved stretch of pipe below the point of inflection in the S-shaped length of pipeline as it is lowered on to the sea bed from a barge (cf. overbend n.). ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > oil and natural gas recovery equipment > [noun] > pipe-line > specific stretch of overbend1969 sagbend1969 1969 Preprints 1st Ann. Offshore Technol. Conf. II. 37/2 To prevent excessive bending in the sag bend a straight stinger must discharge the pipe very near to the bottom. 1975 Petroleum Rev. 29 309/1 A pipe tensioning system has been provided which will avoid buckles in the sagbend. sag pond n. a pond whose basin is the result of earth movement associated with a fault. ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > water > lake > pond > [noun] > other brick pond1735 sag pond1933 1933 Calif. Jrnl. Mines & Geol. 29 197 Numerous little water-holding depressions known as sag ponds mark the site of local subsidences. 1974 Gribbin & Plagemann Jupiter Effect x. 114 And yet in the San Francisco Peninsula, where memories of 1906 should prompt some caution, lines of so-called sag ponds, which geologists use as a clear indicator of the fault line, have been filled in to make building land! sag wagon n. Cycling (see quot. 1961); also transferred. ΘΚΠ society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > motor lorry, truck, or van > [noun] > van > following cycle race sag wagon1961 1961 E. Partridge Dict. Slang (ed. 5) II. 1257/1 Sag-wagon, a van that, following a [cycle] race, picks up exhausted riders. 1963 Times 6 June 5/7 When, later, Selaru had gear trouble they both gave up the struggle for the solace of a sag waggon. 1977 C. McFadden Serial (1978) xlvii. 102/2 You wanna come along in the bus in case I need a sag wagon? This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1909; most recently modified version published online March 2022). † sagadj. Obsolete. rare. Hanging or sagging down. Also in combination sag-bellied. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > support > hanging or suspension > [adjective] > hanging down > drooping or hanging limply droop?1507 flagging1540 sag1541 lolling1567 flaggy1576 fagged1578 flag1591 drooping1600 slouching1611 emarcid1661 flaggish1669 slouchy1693 tangly1812 sunken1823 adroop1833 saggy1853 loppy1855 floppy1858 drooped1873 flippy-floppy1905 the world > life > the body > external parts of body > trunk > front > belly or abdomen > [adjective] > types of great-wombedc1325 wombedc1325 big-bellied?c1475 gorbellieda1529 tunnisha1529 bellieda1533 gorbelly1532 tun-bellied1551 out-bellied1570 paunch-bellied1586 paunchyc1586 big-bellied1592 round-bellied1606 gutty1607 tun-gutted1607 ventripotent1611 swag-bellieda1616 tun-grown1628 bottle-bellied1646 pot-bellied1647 belly-mountained1654 pauncheda1657 sag-bellied1665 barrel-bellied1694 ventricous1702 poke pudding1705 paunch-gutted1726 pot-gutted1731 paunchfula1763 pottle-bellied1777 tunnified1806 tun-likea1813 shad-bellied1832 ventricose1843 bow-windowed1849 bloated-bellied1871 barrel-stomached1884 stomachy1888 well-stomached1896 jelly-bellied1899 narrow-gutted1903 pus-gutted1915 great-stomached1944 1541 Schole House of Women sig. Biv Put me two bones, in a bagge..; That done, holde it somwhat sagge Shake it also, that it maye wagge. 1648 R. Herrick Hesperides sig. K 5 Then..He..eates the sagge And well bestrutted Bees sweet bagge. 1665 J. Ogilby Fables of Æsop Paraphras'd (rev. ed.) lxxxii. 208 An old Sag-bellied Toad. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1909; most recently modified version published online March 2021). sagv. 1. a. intransitive. To sink or subside gradually, by weight or pressure. ΘΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > move downwards [verb (intransitive)] > sink > under weight or pressure sagc1425 swag1630 c1425 Cast. Persev. 1294 in Macro Plays 116 Mankynne is soylyd & saggyd in synne! c1440 Promptorium Parvulorum 440/2 Saggyn or sallyn [? read satlyn] (satelyn, P., stytlyn, S.), basso. 1599 A. M. tr. O. Gaebelkhover Bk. Physicke 96/1 Quilte the bagge least the herbes sacke the one vppon the other. 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. 492 The Cherrie tree wood is firme and fast; the Elme and the Ash are tough; howbeit, they will soone settle downward and sag, being charged with any weight, but bend they will before they break. 1634 J. Levett Ordering of Bees 19 Leaving a shoulder on the inside to stay it and this is good to keep the crowne of Hives from sagging downewards. 1881 C. Darwin Form. Veg. Mould iv. 215 We see in these three sections..that the old pavements have sunk or sagged considerably. 1889 Nature 5 Dec. 103 The crust of the earth must have sagged foot by foot as additional feet of burdens were laid upon it. b. Of a part of the body (occasionally of a person): To droop; to sink or hang down loosely. ΘΠ the world > space > relative position > support > hanging or suspension > hang or be suspended [verb (intransitive)] > hang down > loosely loll1362 sag1526 flag1540 swag1630 blouse1938 1526 W. Bonde Rosary sig. Ciiii Thy blessed body, whiche synkyng downe, dyde sagge and hange be the crosse. 1563 J. Foxe Actes & Monuments 556/1 At laste his feruour began to grow cold & faint, and his handes sagged downewarde. a1565 T. Chaloner tr. Boethius De Consolatione Philosophie i. i. 12 in Queen Elizabeth I Englishings (1899) App. 150 My skynne do sagg in wrinkles slacke, my fflaggy lymbes do tremble. 1567 A. Golding tr. Ovid Metamorphosis (new ed.) xi. f. 138 Apollo could not suffer well his foolish eares too keepe Theyr humaine shape, but drew them wyde, & made them long & deepe. And filld them full of whytish heares, and made them downe too sag. 1592 T. Nashe Pierce Penilesse (Brit. Libr. copy) sig. D2 v Cheekes that sagge like a womans dugges ouer his Chin-bone. a1600 T. Deloney Thomas of Reading (1612) x. sig. Gijv It is sir, your ill favoured great nose, that hangs sagging so loathsomly to your lippes. 1816 W. Taylor in Monthly Mag. 41 144 O could this wrinkled hand unlearn to sag I'd go; and from this crosier shake the union flag. 1849 H. W. Longfellow Kavanagh xxi. 132 Except little Alfred, who was tired and cross, and sat sleepy and sagging on his father's knee. 1902 Westm. Gaz. 5 June 2/1 The head slowly sagged down on to the cushions. c. ‘To hang down on one side’ (Phillips, ed. Kersey 1706). Of a garment: To hang unevenly, to slip out of position. Now chiefly dialect and U.S. Hence occasionally of a person: †To wear ‘sagging’ clothes, to be dressed untidily. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > [verb (intransitive)] > hang or sit in specific way poughc1325 frouncec1400 poke?a1425 to hang by geometry1584 sag1592 bag1824 bustle1824 cascade1861 flare1899 pouch1901 the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > wearing clothing > [verb (intransitive)] > in specific way > types of to cover (one's head)c1340 scrub1590 wimple1591 sag1592 to go thina1610 to be covered1611 rustlea1616 to keep on1621 veil1714 to shake (have) a cloth in the wind1834 smock-frock1840 pad1873 tighten1896 tight-lace1898 the world > space > relative position > support > hanging or suspension > hang or be suspended [verb (intransitive)] > hang down > unevenly sag1592 shag1596 1592 T. Nashe Pierce Penilesse (Brit. Libr. copy) sig. B2 v Sir Rowland Russet-coat, their dad, goes sagging euerie day in his round gascoynes of white cotton, and hath much a doo..to keepe his vnthrift elbowes in reparations. 1592 T. Nashe Pierce Penilesse (Brit. Libr. copy) sig. B3 v A paire of trunke slops, sagging down like a Shoomaker's wallet. 1600 R. Surflet tr. C. Estienne & J. Liébault Maison Rustique i. viii. 32 If the croisant or bodie of the moone hang sagging. 1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Glacer,..to flesh-bast; or stitch downe the lyning of a garment thereby to keepe it from sagging. 1624 Bp. J. Hall True Peace-maker 24 The girdle of whose equitie saggs downe on that side where the purse hangs. 1703 R. Neve City & Countrey Purchaser 29 To prevent a Door from sagging, or sinking at the fore corner. 1854 A. E. Baker Gloss. Northants. Words II. 193 A load of hay or corn that is badly put on the waggon, leaning on one side, and, as it is termed, top-heavy, is said to sag. 1877 E. Peacock Gloss. Words Manley & Corringham, Lincs. (at cited word) Rebecca's made my Sunda' goun sag sorely. 1878 in G. P. Lathrop Masque of Poets 156 His coat is green and sags. 1883 E. C. Rollins New Eng. Bygones (new ed.) 190 It [the bridge] sags to one side. 1885 Harper's Mag. May 867/1 The..gates sag apart. 1903 J. Fox Little Shepherd 345 The gate sagged on its hinges. d. To bend or curve downwards in the middle, from its own weight or superincumbent pressure. Said, e.g., of a rope supported at two points, of a beam, plank, etc. Nautical opposed to hog v.1 ΘΚΠ the world > space > shape > curvature > curved surface > form curved surface [verb (intransitive)] > curve concavely valleya1552 sag1777 cup1830 hollow1862 saucer1925 the world > space > shape > curvature > types of curvature > [verb (intransitive)] > downwards > in the middle sag1777 the world > space > relative position > support > hanging or suspension > hang or be suspended [verb (intransitive)] > hang down > hang from two points sag1777 festoon1789 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > move downwards [verb (intransitive)] > sink > under weight or pressure > in the middle sag1777 society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > parts of vessels > body of vessel > [verb (intransitive)] > droop at ends or in middle camber1758 hog1777 sag1777 1777 W. Hutchinson Treat. Pract. Seamanship 13 And that their bottoms not only hog upwards, but sag (or curve) downwards, to dangerous and fatal degrees. 1842 J. Gwilt Encycl. Archit. ii. iii. 546 The beam by its own gravity..would have a tendency to sag or bend in the middle. 1842 J. Gwilt Encycl. Archit. ii. iii. 546 When the rafters are of such length that they would be liable of themselves to sag down, supports aa are introduced at the points where such failures would occur. 1849 W. Raynbird & H. Raynbird On Agric. Suffolk vi. 298 Sag—to fail or give way from weakness of itself, or overloaded, as the bars of a gate, beams, rafters, &c. 1859 J. G. Whittier Proph. Sam. Sewall 102 Great beams sag from the ceiling low. 1883 R. Haldane Workshop Receipts 2nd Ser. 290/1 The rod will lose its straightness, first sagging in the middle, then dropping. 1885 E. S. Morse Japanese Homes (1886) i. 27 One..comes to wonder why the whole ceiling does not sag. e. To bulge (out); to belly in. Chiefly dialect. ΘΚΠ the world > space > shape > unevenness > projection or prominence > protuberance or rounded projection > be or become protuberant [verb (intransitive)] struta1300 bouge1398 embossc1430 bagc1440 bossc1449 bunch1495 bump1566 boin1567 protuberate1578 pagglea1592 bulch1611 extuberate1623 belly1627 heave1629 bulge1679 swell1679 bud1684 pod1806 bilge1849–52 sag1853 knucklec1862 poocha1903 1853 G. J. Cayley Las Alforjas II. 151 It sagged in like a bellying sail. 1855 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Yorks. Words 145 Sagg'd out, bulged out at the side, as a bowing wall. 1897 R. Kipling Captains Courageous 108 The other half come up sagging full o' big uns. 2. a. To decline to a lower level, through lack of strength or effort. Chiefly figurative. (Common in U.S.) ΘΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > downward motion > move downwards [verb (intransitive)] > sink > from lack of strength or effort sag1508 sink1843 1508 J. Fisher Treat. Penyt. Psalmes sig. hh.iiijv If the helpe of his grace be not redy at all seasons we muste nedes sagge & bowe. a1616 W. Shakespeare Macbeth (1623) v. iii. 10 The minde I sway by, and the heart I beare, Shall neuer sagge with doubt, nor shake with feare. View more context for this quotation 1891 Harper's Mag. Sept. 644/1 Is she sagging towards Realism or rising towards Idealism? 1902 Gildersleeve in Amer. Jrnl. Philol. 23 137 Professor Lawton..says that Parmenides sags in his flight. b. dialect. ‘To decline in health; to begin to show signs of old age’ ( Eng. Dial. Dict.). ΚΠ 1784 J. Cullum Hist. & Antiq. Hawsted in Bibliotheca Topographica Britannica No. 23. 173 He begins to sag. To decline in his health. 1893 F. B. Zincke Wherstead: Some Materials Hist. (ed. 2) 261 For anything to be over-poised, or metaphorically to decline in health, is to ‘sag’. c. Commerce. To decline in price. Also with down, away, off. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > stocks and shares > deal in stocks and shares [verb (intransitive)] > state of market or prices > fall or rise (of prices) to look downwards1796 to look downward1801 to look down1808 rally1826 sag1870 give way1883 slump1888 firm1896 move1904 spurt1931 perform1933 dip1956 to pull back1966 to go in the tank1974 society > trade and finance > monetary value > price > fluctuation in price > [verb (intransitive)] > decline in price or fall fall?1532 to come down1832 settle1868 sag1870 recede1883 shorten1884 ease1900 1870 W. W. Fowler Ten Years in Wall St. xxv. 393 The price grew firmer when two or three men were observed selling quietly large amounts, and then the price sagged to 250. 1887 Sc. Leader 21 June 5 The tone on the Chicago market was dull and weak, with a ‘sagging’ tendency. 1892 Daily News 11 May 3/5 Wheat..further sagged down owing to the increase in amount on passage. 1903 Westm. Gaz. 29 Aug. 7/1 With lack of support the market has sagged away, and closes some 27s. 6d. below last week's values. 1905 Westm. Gaz. 1 June 9/1 There are appreciable advances on the share figures of three months ago on those investments which sagged through last year's bad balance-sheets. 3. To drag oneself along wearily or feebly. Also U.S. (see quot. 1880). ΘΚΠ the world > movement > rate of motion > slowness > move or go slowly [verb (intransitive)] > slowly or wearily sag1573 trail1864 1573 T. Twyne tr. Virgil in T. Phaer & T. Twyne tr. Virgil Whole .xii. Bks. Æneidos x. E e j b Encounter them at land Whilest fearful they come forth, and their first steps do sag in sand. 1612 M. Drayton Poly-olbion xvi. 250 This said, the aged Steed sagd sadly on alone. 1880 Webster's Suppl. Sag, to loiter in walking; to idle along; to drag or droop heavily. 1897 ‘O. Rhoscomyl’ For White Rose Arno (U.K. ed.) 165 ‘And I am not more than a third of the way along’, said he to himself, as the horse sagged slower at every stride. 4. a. Nautical. Of a ship or boat: To drift, be carried out of the intended course. Chiefly in the phrase to sag to leeward. ΘΚΠ society > travel > travel by water > directing or managing a ship > direct or manage ship [verb (intransitive)] > head in a certain course or direction > drop away from direct course to fall off1569 yaw1584 sag1633 bag1836 to break off1867 1633 T. James Strange Voy. 93 [In tacking] we did sagge upon the maine rand of Ice. 1769 W. Falconer Universal Dict. Marine (1780) Sagging to leeward, the movement by which a ship makes a considerable lee-way, or is driven far to leeward of the course whereon she apparently sails. It is generally expressed of heavy-sailing vessels. 1794 D. Steel Elements & Pract. Rigging & Seamanship II. 256* To Sag to leeward, to make considerable lee-way. 1849 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 66 726 The want of actual headway making the Indiaman sag dead away to leeward. 1856 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. II. xxix. 287 McGary hung upon his oar, and the boat, slowly but noiselessly sagging ahead. 1892 R. Kipling Barrack-room Ballads 206 We're sagging south on the Long Trail. ΘΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > change of direction of movement > change direction of movement [verb (intransitive)] > diverge from course bowa1000 swervec1330 wrya1350 crookc1380 to turn asidea1382 depart1393 decline14.. wryc1400 divert1430 desvoy1481 wave1548 digress1552 prevaricate1582 yaw1584 to turn off1605 to come off1626 deviate1635 sag1639 to flinch out1642 deflect1646 de-err1657 break1678 verge1693 sheera1704 to break off1725 lean1894 the mind > will > decision > irresolution or vacillation > reversal of or forsaking one's will or purpose > reverse or abandon one's purpose [verb (intransitive)] > drift into or from sag1639 1639 T. Fuller Hist. Holy Warre iv. xix. 202 We see elective States in Christendome, though bound with the straitest laws, often sagge aside into schismes and factions. 1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. ix. 142 Yet such [spheres] as are excentricall can never observe equall distance in their motion, but will sagg aside to grind, and grate one the other. a1661 T. Fuller Worthies (1662) London 224 No Hospital is tyed with better or stricter laws, that it may not Sagg from the intention of the Founder. 5. transitive in causative senses. ΘΠ the world > movement > progressive motion > moving with current of air or water > move with current of air or water [verb (transitive)] > of current: cause to drift sag1635 1635 in M. Christy Voy. L. Foxe & T. James (1894) I. 191 After he was loos'd he was sagged into the Bay. a1665 K. Digby Jrnl. Voy. to Mediterranean (1868) 77 The current sagged me into the bay deeper towardes the eastward. b. [ < sense 1d] To cause to bend downwards in the middle. ΘΠ the world > space > shape > curvature > types of curvature > [verb (transitive)] > curve downwards in middle sag1755 saddle1791 1755 S. Johnson Dict. Eng. Lang. To Sag, v.a. To load; to burthen. 1777 W. Hutchinson Treat. Pract. Seamanship 13 Their bottoms were thus sagged down by the cargoes. 1777 W. Hutchinson Treat. Pract. Seamanship 13 Sagged down~wards six inches by her cargo. 1869 E. J. Reed Shipbuilding v. 93 The ultimate measures of the strengths of the ships to resist a strain tending to hog or sag, or break them across is as 5 : 4. 1892 C. Lapworth in Proc. Geogr. Soc. 689 The surface of this American arch is sagged downwards in the middle into a central depression which lies between two long marginal plateaux. 1902 Westm. Gaz. 5 July 8/3 The vessel will first be ‘sagged’ by being hung by the head and the stern only from two platforms, one at each end. 6. intransitive and transitive. To play truant (from). Liverpool local. ΚΠ 1959 I. Opie & P. Opie Lore & Lang. Schoolchildren xvii. 372 Sagging. This is definitely the prevailing term [for playing truant] amongst delinquents in all parts of Liverpool. 1965 Woman 28 Aug. 8 I re-visit childhood haunts in Liverpool, meet the next generation in the Cathedral grounds where we used to ‘sag’—that is, play truant. 1966 F. Shaw et al. Lern Yerself Scouse 45 I'm saggin skewl, I am playing truant. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1909; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11531n.21589adj.1541v.c1425 |
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