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sag
1[ sag ]
verb (used without object)
- to sink or bend downward by weight or pressure, especially in the middle:
The roof sags.
- to hang down unevenly; droop:
Her skirt was sagging.
- to droop; hang loosely:
His shoulders sagged.
- to yield through weakness, lack of effort, or the like:
Our spirits began to sag.
- to decline, as in price:
The stock market sagged today.
- Nautical.
- (of a hull) to droop at the center or have excessive sheer because of structural weakness. Compare hog ( def 14 ).
- to be driven to leeward; to make too much leeway.
verb (used with object)
- to cause to sag.
noun
- an act or instance of sagging.
- the degree of sagging.
- a place where anything sags; depression.
- a moderate decline in prices.
- Nautical.
- deflection downward of a hull amidships, due to structural weakness.
SAG
2[ sag ]
noun
sag
/ sæɡ /
verb
- also tr to sink or cause to sink in parts, as under weight or pressure
the bed sags in the middle
- to fall in value
prices sagged to a new low
- to hang unevenly; droop
- (of courage, spirits, etc) to weaken; flag
Other Words From
- anti·sag adjective
- un·sagging adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of sag1
Word History and Origins
Origin of sag1
Example Sentences
Globally, for the third quarter, Tesla sales rose 6.4% as the new Cybertruck made up for sagging sales of the Model 3 and Model Y.
Even into the 1950s, kids living in snowbound American climes might find an orange — one solitary, precious orange — sagging in the toe of their Christmas stocking.
And the more Sue disrespects the week on/week off balance, the more Elisabeth will suffer varicose veins, thinning, graying hair, sagging breasts, and other indignities of aging.
Its rice was a finicky crop that sprouts slow, skinny and tall, with fewer grains per bunch, and heads that can sag below the reach of the thresher and end up in the mud.
The 70-year-old's recent confession about dumping a dead bear in Central Park is just the latest strange twist to a campaign that was already sagging in the polls.
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