Antonyms for jagging
Grammar : Noun, verb |
Spell : jag |
Phonetic Transcription : dʒæg |
- abandon
- abstain
- add
- aid
- allocate
- assist
- avoid
- be honest
- be immune
- close
- compliment
- cure
- decrease
- depress
- disallow
- discontinue
- discourage
- disenchant
- dismantle
- disperse
- dispose
- dissuade
- distribute
- dodge
- drop
- fail
- fix
- flush
- free
- give
- heal
- help
- hold
- ignore
- increase
- keep
- leave
- lessen
- lose
- lower
- maintain
- make happy
- mend
- misconceive
- misunderstand
- neglect
- offer
- please
- praise
- push
- raise
- receive
- refuse
- reject
- relieve
- remain
- repair
- repulse
- rise
- sew
- smooth
- stay
- stop
- turn off
- unite
- unpack
- untie
Definition of jagging
Origin :- "period of unrestrained activity," 1887, American English, perhaps via intermediate sense of "as much drink as a man can hold" (1670s), from earlier meaning "load of hay or wood" (1590s), of unknown origin. Used in U.S. colloquial speech from 1834 to mean "a quantity, a lot."
- As in nick : noun chip, scratch
- As in indent : verb make a space; push in slightly
- As in knife : verb stab with pointed tool
- As in lacerate : verb tear, cut; wound
- As in notch : verb indent
- As in pack : verb transport, carry
- As in stab : verb puncture, pierce with sharp, pointed object
- As in take : verb carry, transport; accompany
- As in transport : verb move, transfer
- As in haul : verb move, pull to another spot
- It has been known ever since as Goren's Dome, and a good-sized window, jagging the wall, admits one or two lookers at a time.
- Extract from : « Idle Hour Stories » by Eugenia Dunlap Potts
- Cut it into long slips with a jagging iron, or with a sharp knife, and twist them into various fantastic shapes.
- Extract from : « Directions for Cookery, in its Various Branches » by Eliza Leslie
- Then roll it out rather more than half an inch thick, and cut it into square cakes with a jagging iron or with a sharp knife.
- Extract from : « Directions for Cookery, in its Various Branches » by Eliza Leslie
- Or you may cut it out into separate cakes with a jagging iron, previous to baking.
- Extract from : « Directions for Cookery, in its Various Branches » by Eliza Leslie
- Roll thin, cut in oblong cakes with a jagging iron, or in any way to suit the fancy.
- Extract from : « The Golden Age Cook Book » by Henrietta Latham Dwight
- We are still in the age of the houppelande, the time of cut edges, jagging, big sleeves and trailing gowns.
- Extract from : « English Costume » by Dion Clayton Calthrop
- Then he was sorry for the pride of it, and he pulled it down on his face, and whistled to stop his nose from jagging.
- Extract from : « The Lost Pibroch » by Neil Munro
- Roll some of the crust very thin, cut it into narrow strips, with a jagging iron, and lay it on the pie in a fanciful manner.
- Extract from : « The New England Cook Book, or Young Housekeeper's Guide » by Anonymous
- So exquisite is the sensibility, that to touch a hair of the head or beard, is like the jagging of needles into the body.
- Extract from : « Opium Eating » by Anonymous
- She did it in broad strokes, painting the walls of our bedroom with her blood, jagging all night through rant after rant.
- Extract from : « Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom » by Cory Doctorow
Synonyms for jagging
- attend
- back
- bash
- bayonet
- bear
- boost
- brand
- bring
- buck
- carry
- cart
- carve
- cave in
- chisel
- chop
- chop down
- claw
- cleave
- clip
- conduct
- convey
- convoy
- crenelate
- crimp
- cut
- damage
- dent
- depress
- dint
- drag
- draw
- drive
- elevate
- escort
- ferry
- fetch
- freight
- gash
- go with
- gore
- guide
- gun
- harm
- haul
- heave
- heel
- hit
- hoist
- hollow
- hump
- hurt
- impale
- incise
- indent
- injure
- jab
- jag
- journey
- kill
- knife
- knock
- lacerate
- lance
- lead
- lift
- lug
- maim
- mangle
- mark
- mill
- move
- mutilate
- nick
- notch
- open up
- pack
- penetrate
- pierce
- piggy back
- piggyback
- pilot
- pink
- pit
- plow
- plunge
- prick
- prong
- punch
- puncture
- rabbet
- raise
- rake
- ram
- remove
- rend
- ride
- rip
- run
- run through
- rut
- saber
- scallop
- scar
- schlepp
- score
- scratch
- serrate
- shank
- shift
- ship
- shiv
- shlep
- shoulder
- sink
- slash
- slice
- slit
- spear
- spit
- stab
- steer
- stick
- take
- thrust
- torment
- torture
- tote
- tour
- tow
- trail
- transfix
- transport
- trawl
- trek
- truck
- tug
- usher
- wound
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019