Definitions for BAg

BAg bag

Spelling: [bag]
IPA: /bæg/

Bag is a 3 letter English word. It's valid Scrabble word worth 6 points. It's valid Words with friends word worth 8 points.

You can make 12 anagrams from letters in BAg (abg).

Definitions for BAg

noun

  1. a container or receptacle of leather, plastic, cloth, paper, etc., capable of being closed at the mouth; pouch.
  2. something resembling or suggesting such a receptacle.
  3. a suitcase or other portable container for carrying articles, as in traveling.
  4. a purse or moneybag.
  5. the amount or quantity a bag can hold.
  6. any of various measures of capacity.
  7. a sac, as in an animal body.
  8. an udder.
  9. Slang. a small glassine or cellophane envelope containing a narcotic drug or a mixture of narcotics.
  10. something hanging in a loose, pouchlike manner, as skin or cloth; a baggy part:
  11. Baseball. base1 (def 8b).
  12. Hunting. the amount of game taken, especially by one hunter in one hunting trip or over a specified period.
  13. Slang. a person's avocation, hobby, major interest, or obsession: a person's mood or frame of mind: an environment, condition, or situation.
  14. bags. Informal. plenty; much; many (usually followed by of): Slang. trousers.

Idioms

  1. bag and baggage, with all one's personal property: completely, totally:
  2. bag of bones, an emaciated person or animal.
  3. bag of tricks, a supply of expedient resources; stratagems:
  4. in the bag, Informal. virtually certain; assured; definite:
  5. leave holding the bag / sack, Informal. to force to bear the entire blame, responsibility, or loss that was to have been shared:
  6. old bag, Slang. an unattractive, often slatternly woman:

interjection

  1. bags! British Slang. (used to lay first claim to something):

verb (used with object)

  1. to cause to swell or bulge; distend:
  2. to put into a bag.
  3. Informal. to kill or catch, as in hunting:
  4. Slang. to quit, abandon, or skip (often used in the phrase bag it):
  5. Theater. clew (def 9a).

verb (used without object)

  1. to swell or bulge:
  2. to hang loosely like an empty bag:
  3. to pack groceries or other items into a bag.

Origin of BAg

1200-50; 1920-25 for def 29; Middle English bagge Old Norse baggi pack, bundle

Examples for BAg

That bag at his girdle is full of the teeth that he drew at Winchester fair.

I have a bag at my belt, camarade, and you have but to put your fist into it for what you want.

Bookstores are stocked with self-help books telling girls how to bag a millionaire.

Grace took out of her bag a guest towel she was embroidering.

Elle magazine shot an editorial in September, one picture revealing a teacup pig sitting pretty by a mini Tyler Alexandra bag.

With his bag in hand, he wandered through the streets, uncertain what to do or where to go.

“Which proves he is as dumb as a bag of hammers,” the official says.

They were allowed to bring one bag per family, which most fill with food.

Available at Rose Fitzgerald Kane, $55  With this bag, your little one may just be the cutest in the class.

And now I must pack up a few necessaries in my bag, and be off to Mr. Brunton's.

Word Value for BAg
Scrable

6

Words with friends

8

Word of the day