Gag vs Gam - What's the difference?
gag | gam |
group specific antigens
A device to restrain speech, such as a rag in the mouth secured with tape or a rubber ball threaded onto a cord or strap.
(legal) An order or rule forbidding discussion of a case or subject.
A joke or other mischievous prank.
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=May 20
, author=Nathan Rabin
, title=TV: Review: THE SIMPSONS (CLASSIC): “Marge Gets A Job” (season 4, episode 7; originally aired 11/05/1992)
, work=The Onion AV Club
A convulsion of the upper digestive tract.
(archaic) A mouthful that makes one retch or choke.
To experience the vomiting reflex.
To cause to heave with nausea.
(rfc-sense) To : to order a recruit to exercise until he "gags" (usually spoken in exaggeration).
To restrain someone's speech by blocking his or her mouth.
* {{quote-book, year=1905, author=
, title=
, chapter=1 (figuratively) To restrain someone's speech without using physical means.
* Macaulay
To pry or hold open by means of a gag.
* Fortescue (translation)
(slang) A person's leg, especially an attractive woman's leg.
* 2010 , Home Swell Home: Designing Your Dream Pad (ISBN 0743446356), page 19:
* 2012 September 10, (Ariel Levy), "The Space In Between", in The New Yorker :
(Collective noun used to refer to) a group of whales, or rarely also of porpoises; a pod.
* 1862 , Henry Theodore Cheever, The Whalemen's Adventures in the Southern Ocean , Darton & Hodge, page 116:
* 1985 , Dennis Kyte, To the Heart of a Bear: The Last Elegant Bear (ISBN 067154781X):
* 2010 , Jack White, Mastery of Self Promotion (ISBN 0557339510), page 119:
* (seemoreCites)
(by extension) A social gathering of whalers (whaling ships).
* 1851 , Herman Melville, Moby-Dick; or, The Whale , Harper and Brothers,
* 1916 , Harry B. Turner, Nantucket's Early Telegraph Service'', in the ''Proceedings of the Nantucket Historical Association , page 50:
* 1997 , Gillies Ross, ?Margaret Penny, This Distant and Unsurveyed Country (ISBN 0773516743), page 14:
* 2007 , Tom Chaffin, Sea of Gray: The Around-the-World Odyssey of the Confederate Raider Shenandoah (ISBN 0374707006), page 230:
(nautical) To make a social visit on another ship at sea.
* 2008 , Eric Jay Dolin, Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America (ISBN 0393066665), page 436:
* 2011 , Paul Schneider, The Enduring Shore: A History of Cape Cod (ISBN 0805067345), page 255:
* 2014 , James Revell Carr, Hawaiian Music in Motion (ISBN 0252096525), page 181:
(rfv-sense) .
* 1992 , Kenneth Darwin, Familia 1992: Ulster Geneological Review: Number 8 (ISBN 0901905569):
As nouns the difference between gag and gam
is that gag is gag (a joke or other mischievous prank) while gam is (slang) a person's leg, especially an attractive woman's leg or gam can be (collective noun used to refer to) a group of whales, or rarely also of porpoises; a pod or gam can be .As a verb gam is
(nautical) to make a social visit on another ship at sea.gag
English
Abbreviation
(Abbreviation) (head) (Group-specific antigen)Noun
(en noun)citation, page= , passage=We all know how genius “Kamp Krusty,” “A Streetcar Named Marge,” “Homer The Heretic,” “Itchy & Scratchy: The Movie” and “Mr. Plow” are, but even the relatively unheralded episodes offer wall-to-wall laughs and some of the smartest, darkest, and weirdest gags ever Trojan-horsed into a network cartoon with a massive family audience.}}
- a gag of mutton fat
- (Lamb)
Synonyms
* (legal) gag order * (joke) See alsoDerived terms
* sight gagVerb
- He gagged when he saw the open wound.
citation, passage=“[…] Captain Markam had been found lying half-insensible, gagged and bound, on the floor of the sitting-room, his hands and feet tightly pinioned, and a woollen comforter wound closely round his mouth and neck?; whilst Mrs. Markham's jewel-case, containing valuable jewellery and the secret plans of Port Arthur, had disappeared. […]”}}
- ''The victims could not speak because the burglar had gagged them with duct tape.
- When the financial irregularities were discovered, the CEO gagged everyone in the accounting department.
- The time was not yet come when eloquence was to be gagged , and reason to be hoodwinked.
- mouths gagged to such a wideness
Derived terms
* gag me with a spoongam
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl)Noun
(en noun)- Make the salesclerk blush by flashing some gam and asking him to mix a bucket in your flesh tone.
- The women's-liberation movement of the late sixties and the seventies – the so-called second wave of feminism – introduced Americans to the notion that their mothers and sisters and daughters ought not to be "objectified": that there was something wrong with reducing female people to boobs, gams , and beaver.
References
Etymology 2
Noun
(en noun)- Upon getting into a "gam " of whales, this boat, together with that of one of the mates, pulled for a single whale that was seen at a distance from the others, and succeeded in getting square up to their victim unperceived.
- Breakfast was interrupted as a gam of porpoises surrounded the Argyle , swaying in the foam and singing in gurgles and beeps.
- Christmas day in 1998, we lived on the Pacific Ocean in Pacific Grove, California and watched a gam of whales breaching in the deep ultramarine water.
chapter 53:
- But what is a Gam'? You might wear out your index-finger running up and down the columns of dictionaries, and never find the word, Dr. Johnson never attained to that erudition; Noah Webster’s ark does not hold it. Nevertheless, this same expressive word has now for many years been in constant use among some fifteen thousand true born Yankees. Certainly, it needs a definition, and should be incorporated into the Lexicon. With that view, let me learnedly define it. ' Gam . NOUN—A social meeting of two (or more) Whaleships, generally on a cruising-ground; when, after exchanging hails, they exchange visits by boats’ crews, the two captains remaining, for the time, on board of one ship, and the two chief mates on the other.
- There is still that yearning for news from Nantucket that there was when the whale-ships stopped for a gam out in the far-distant Pacific Ocean
- If time was available, whaling prospects poor, and the weather gentle, a gam might last all day and include tea and dinner.
- Twice each year, the Russian Navy sent out such ships to provision Russian whalers in the Sea of Okhotsk. In sailing toward the supposed Russian ship, the Abigail ’s captain, Ebenezer Nye, was hoping for a gam with the ship's officers
Verb
- Although most whalemen looked forward to gamming and enjoyed these ocean-borne gatherings, there were at least a few whalemen who either grew weary of them, or just weary of gamming so often with the same ships over and over.
- This was early in the summer of 1820, after nearly a year at sea, and they had gammed the whaling ship Aurora, which had on board not only plenty of letters but some newspapers as well.
- In chapter 2 we saw how gamming whalers sang songs that tied them to their homelands while emphasizing the transient, cosmopolitan nature of their work,
Etymology 3
From (etyl) .Noun
(en noun)- At some stage some gam of an official decided that Guihen should be translated to the English name Wynne.
