gag
英 [ɡæɡ]
美 [ɡæɡ]
- vt. 塞住…的口;钳制…的言论;使窒息
- vi. 插科打诨;窒息;作呕
- n. 塞口物;讨论终结;箝制言论
- n. (Gag)人名;(英)加格
1. 该词是拟声词,模拟被噎住、呛住、窒息时发出的声音。
2. => choke, strangle.
4. 嘴巴、喉咙被堵住、阻塞时发出的声音。
5. 谐音“卡口、卡壳” ---- *kak- => gag.
6. choke => gag.
7. 象形:在两个字母g之间插入一个字母a将其堵住、塞住。在哥哥(gg)的嘴里塞一个(a)东西将他的嘴堵住。
8. 模拟嘴巴被塞住后只能发出“嘎嘎、嘎嘎”的那种声音。
9. gag: http://9gag.com/
10. 由插入东西在嘴里,引申为插入一些笑料进来、穿插一些笑话进来等。
11. 搞gag、烂gag、冷gag、gag man、gag woman,韩国综艺:《Gag Concert》。
- gag
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gag: [15] Middle English gaggen meant ‘strangle, suffocate’, so the word started out with strong connotations that seem to have become submerged in local dialects as it came to be used more commonly in the milder sense ‘obstruct someone’s mouth’. In the 20th century, however, they have re-emerged in the intransitive sense ‘choke’. It is not clear how the 19th-century noun sense ‘joke’ is connected, if at all. As for the word’s source, it is generally said to have originated as an imitation of someone retching or choking.
- gag (v.)
- mid-15c., transitive, "to choke, strangle" (someone), possibly imitative and perhaps influenced by Old Norse gag-hals "with head thrown back." The sense of "stop a person's mouth by thrusting something into it" is first attested c. 1500. Intransitive sense of "to retch" is from 1707. Transitive meaning "cause to heave with nausea" is from 1945. Related: Gagged; gagging.
- gag (n.2)
- "a joke," 1863, especially a practical joke, 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 of which perhaps are from gag (v.) on the notion of "to stuff, fill" (see gag (v.)). Gagster "comedian" is by 1932.
- gag (n.1)
- "something thrust into the mouth or throat to prevent speaking," 1550s, from gag (v.); figurative use, "violent or authoritative repression of speech," is from 1620s. Gag-law in reference to curbs on freedom of the press is from 1798, American English. The gag-rule that blocked anti-slavery petitions in the U.S. House of Representatives was in force from 1836 to 1844.
- 1. His captors had put a gag of thick leather in his mouth.
- 劫持者用一块厚厚的皮革堵住了他的嘴。
- 2. Each gag was rewarded with a generous belly-laugh.
- 每一次插科打诨都引来一阵开怀大笑。
- 3. They tied him up and put a gag on him.
- 他们把他绑起来并用布堵住了他的嘴.
- 4. The robbers rammed the gag in her mouth.
- 强盗用力将堵嘴物塞进她口中.
- 5. The gang tied up the security guard and put a gag in his mouth.
- 那帮歹徒把保安人员捆绑起来,然后把他的嘴堵住.