Hag vs Haggart - What's the difference?
hag | haggart |
A witch, sorceress, or enchantress; a wizard.
* (rfdate) Golding
(pejorative) An ugly old woman.
A fury; a she-monster.
A hagfish; an eel-like marine marsipobranch, , allied to the lamprey, with a suctorial mouth, labial appendages, and a single pair of gill openings.
A hagdon or shearwater.
An appearance of light and fire on a horse's mane or a man's hair.
The fruit of the hagberry, Prunus padus .
To harass; to weary with vexation.
* L'Estrange
A small wood, or part of a wood or copse, which is marked off or enclosed for felling, or which has been felled.
* Fairfax
A quagmire; mossy ground where peat or turf has been cut.
(Webster 1913)
(Irish, dated) a farmyard or small enclosed field; a vegetable patch or kitchen garden
*1827 Gerald Griffin "
*:the very meadows in which he had assisted at harvest time in filling the load of sweet hay on the car, for the purpose of stacking in the haggart
*1856 'One of the rakes of Mallow' "
*:Jack escaped out of a back window which looked into the haggart , where the cows were kept every night.
*1879 Charles Kickham
*:Mr. Lowe remarked also the little ornamental wooden gate, the work of Mat's own hands, that led to the kitchen-garden invariably called the "haggart " in this part of the world which was fenced all round by a thick thorn hedge, with a little privet and holly intermixed here and there.
As nouns the difference between hag and haggart
is that hag is mind, mindset, temper, inclination while haggart is (irish|dated) a farmyard or small enclosed field; a vegetable patch or kitchen garden.hag
English
Etymology 1
(etyl) hagge, hegge 'demon, old woman', shortening of (etyl) '', ).1987, E. C. Polomé, R. Bergmann (editor), "Althochdeutsch ''hag(a)zussa'' 'Hexe': Versuch einer neuen Etymologie", ''Althochdeutsch 2 (Wörter und Namen. Forschungsgeschichte) , pages 1107-1112.Noun
(en noun)- [Silenus] that old hag .
- (Crashaw)
- (Blount)
Synonyms
* (witch or sorceress) * (ugly old woman) See also * (fury or she-monster) * (eel-like marine marsipobranch) borer, hagfish, sleepmarken, slime eel, sucker * (hagdon or shearwater) * (appearance of light and fire on mane or hair) * (fruit of the hagberry)Derived terms
* fag hagVerb
(hagg)- How are superstitious men hagged out of their wits with the fancy of omens.
Etymology 2
Scots ; compare English hack.Noun
(en noun)- This said, he led me over hoults and hags ; / Through thorns and bushes scant my legs I drew.
- (Dugdale)
References
Anagrams
* ----haggart
English
Noun
(en noun)Tales of the Munster Festivals" The London Magazine , December 1827; Vol.19, p.493:
Ireland thirty years since" The Sporting Magazine (London: Rogerson & Texford) May 1856, p.366:
Knocknagow : or, The homes of TipperaryChapter 7 "NORAH LAHY. THE OLD LINNET'S SONG." (Dublin : J. Duffy) 13th ed. (1887), p.50: