Jag vs Tag - What's the difference?
jag | tag |
A sharp projection.
* Holland
A part broken off; a fragment.
(botany) A cleft or division.
(Scotland) A medical injection.
To cut unevenly.
(Pittsburgh) To tease.
A binge or period of overindulgence; a spree.
* 1939 , (Raymond Chandler), The Big Sleep , Penguin 2011, p. 88:
a one-horse cart load, or, in modern times, a truck load, of hay or wood.
A small label.
A game played by two or more children in which one child (known as "it") attempts to catch one of the others, who then becomes "it".
A skin tag, an excrescence of skin.
A type of cardboard.
Graffiti in the form of a stylized signature particular to the person who makes the graffiti.
A dangling lock of sheep's wool, matted with dung; a dung tag.
An attribution in narrated dialogue (eg, "he said").
(chiefly, US) a vehicle number plate; a medal bearing identification data (animals, soldiers).
(baseball) An instance of touching the baserunner with the ball or the ball in a gloved hand.
(computing) A piece of markup representing an element in a markup language.
(computing) A keyword, term, or phrase associated with or assigned to data, media, and/or information enabling keyword-based classification; often used to categorize content.
Any slight appendage, as to an article of dress; something slight hanging loosely.
A metallic binding, tube, or point, at the end of a string, or lace, to stiffen it.
The end, or catchword, of an actor's speech; cue.
Something mean and paltry; the rabble.
A sheep in its first year.
(lb) Any short peptide sequence artificially attached to proteins mostly in order to help purify, solubilize or visualize these proteins.
To label (something).
(graffiti) To mark (something) with one’s tag.
To remove dung tags from a sheep.
(transitive, baseball, colloquial) To hit the ball hard.
(baseball) To put a runner out by touching them with the ball or the ball in a gloved hand.
(computing) To mark with a tag (metadata for classification).
To follow closely, accompany, tag along.
* 1906 , O. Henry,
To catch and touch (a player in the game of tag).
To fit with, or as if with, a tag or tags.
* Macaulay
* Dryden
To fasten; to attach.
A decoration drawn over some Hebrew letters in Jewish scrolls.
As an acronym jag
is (legal|military) judge advocate general.As an abbreviation tag is
.jag
English
Etymology 1
The noun is from late (etyl) jagge, the verb is from jaggen.Noun
(en noun)- garments thus beset with long jags
- (Bishop Hacket)
Derived terms
* (l)Verb
Etymology 2
Circa 1597; originally "load of broom or furze", variant of British English dialectal , of unknown origin.Noun
(en noun)- ‘People who spend their money for second-hand sex jags are as nervous as dowagers who can't find the rest-room.’
See also
* Jag * JAGAnagrams
* ----tag
English
(wikipedia tag)Etymology 1
Noun
(en noun)- The tag was applied at second for the final out.
- The
tag provides a title for the Web page.
- The
tag conveys sarcasm in Internet slang.
- I want to add genre and artist tags to the files in my music collection.
- (Halliwell)
Verb
(tagg)- Regularly tag the rear ends of your sheep.
- He really tagged that ball.
- He tagged the runner for the out.
- I am tagging my music files by artist and genre.
- A tall young man came striding through the park along the path near which she sat. Behind him tagged a boy carrying a suit-case.
- He learned to make long-tagged thread laces.
- His courteous host / Tags every sentence with some fawning word.
- (Bolingbroke)
