verb (used with object), gagged, gag·ging.
- to stop up the mouth of (a person) by putting something in it, thus preventing speech, shouts, etc.
- to restrain by force or authority from freedom of speech; silence.
- to fasten open the jaws of, as in surgical operations.
- to cause to retch or choke.
- Metalworking. to straighten or bend (a bar, rail, etc.) with a gag.
verb (used without object), gagged, gag·ging.
- to retch or choke.
noun
- something put into a person’s mouth to prevent speech, shouting, etc.
- any forced or arbitrary suppression of freedom of speech.
- a surgical instrument for holding the jaws open.
- Metalworking. a shaped block of steel used with a press to straighten or bend a bar, rail, etc.
noun
- a joke, especially one introduced into a script or an actor’s part.
- any contrived piece of wordplay or horseplay.
verb (used without object), gagged, gag·ging.
- to tell jokes or make amusing remarks.
- to introduce gags in acting.
- to play on another’s credulity, as by telling false stories.
verb (used with object), gagged, gag·ging.
- to introduce usually comic interpolations into (a script, an actor’s part, or the like) (usually followed by up).
verb gags, gagging or gagged
- (tr) to stop up (a person’s mouth), esp with a piece of cloth, etc, to prevent him or her from speaking or crying out
- (tr) to suppress or censor (free expression, information, etc)
- to retch or cause to retch
- (intr) to struggle for breath; choke
- (tr) to hold (the jaws) of (a person or animal) apart with a surgical gag
- (tr) to apply a gag-bit to (a horse)
- be gagging for or be gagging to slang to be very eager to have or do something
noun
- a piece of cloth, rope, etc, stuffed into or tied across the mouth
- any restraint on or suppression of information, free speech, etc
- a surgical device for keeping the jaws apart, as during a tonsillectomy
- parliamentary procedure another word for closure (def. 4)
noun
- a joke or humorous story, esp one told by a professional comedian
- a hoax, practical joke, etche did it for a gag
verb gags, gagging or gagged
- (intr) to tell jokes or funny stories, as comedians in nightclubs, etc
- (often foll by up) theatre
- to interpolate lines or business not in the actor’s stage part, usually comic and improvised
- to perform a stage jest, either spoken or based on movement
mid-15c., “to choke, strangle,” possibly imitative or influenced by Old Norse gaghals “with head thrown back.” The sense of “stop a person’s mouth” is first attested c.1500. Related: Gagged; gagging.
“joke,” 1863, probably related to theatrical sense of “matter interpolated in a written piece by the actor” (1847); or from the sense “made-up story” (1805); or from slang verbal sense of “to deceive, take in with talk” (1777), all perhaps on notion of “stuff, fill” (see gag (v.)).
“act of gagging,” 1550s, from gag (v.); figurative use from 1620s.
v.
- To choke, retch, or undergo a regurgitative spasm.
- To prevent from talking.
n.
- An instrument adjusted between the teeth to keep the mouth from closing during operations in the mouth or throat.