English-Thai Dictionary
dag
N กระจุก ขนสัตว์ ที่ ปกคลุม ไป ด้วย มูลสัตว์ daglock kra-juk-kon-sad-ti-pok-klum-pai-duai-mun-sad
dag
N ชายผ้า เป็น หยักๆ ลูกไม้ chai-pa-pen-yak-yak
dag
N เดคากรัม หน่วย วัด น้ำหนัก มีค่า เท่ากับ 10 กรัม decagram ka-da-ko
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
DAG
n.A dagger; a hand-gun; a pistol.
DAG
n.Dew.
DAG
n. 1. a loose end, as of locks of wool; called also dag-locks.
2. A leather latchet.
DAG
v.t. 1. To daggle.
2. To cut into slips.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
DAG
Dag, n. Etym: [Cf. F. dague, LL. daga, D. dagge (fr. French ); all prob. fr. Celtic; Cf. Gael. dag a pistol, Armor. dag dagger, W. dager, dagr, Ir. daigear. Cf. Dagger. ]
1. A dagger; a poniard. [Obs. ] Johnson.
2. A large pistol formerly used. [Obs. ] The Spaniards discharged their dags, and hurt some. Foxe. A sort of pistol, called dag, was used about the same time as hand guns and harquebuts. Grose.
3. (Zoöl.)
Defn: The unbrunched antler of a young deer.
DAG
Dag, n. Etym: [Of Scand. origin; cf. Sw. dagg, Icel. dögg. sq. root71. See Dew. ]
Defn: A misty shower; dew. [Obs. ]
DAG
Dag, n. Etym: [OE. dagge (cf. Dagger ); or cf. AS. dag what is dangling. ]
Defn: A loose end; a dangling shred. Daglocks, clotted locks hanging in dags or jags at a sheep's tail. Wedgwood.
DAG
Dag, v. t. Etym: [1, from Dag dew. 2, from Dag a loose end. ]
1. To daggle or bemire. [Prov. Eng. ] Johnson.
2. To cut into jags or points; to slash; as, to dag a garment. [Obs. ] Wright.
DAG
DAG Dag, v. i.
Defn: To be misty; to drizzle. [Prov. Eng. ]
New American Oxford Dictionary
dag
dag |dag dæɡ | ▶noun Austral. /NZ informal an unfashionable or socially conservative person. ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense ‘a hanging part of something ’): of unknown origin.
Oxford Dictionary
dag
dag |dag | ▶noun 1 (usu. dags ) Austral. /NZ a lock of wool matted with dung hanging from the hindquarters of a sheep. 2 Austral. /NZ informal an entertainingly eccentric person; a character. 3 Austral. informal a conservative or unfashionable person. • an untidy or dirty-looking person. • an awkward adolescent. ▶verb ( dags, dagging, dagged ) [ with obj. ] Austral. /NZ cut dags from (a sheep ). PHRASES rattle one's dags Austral. /NZ informal hurry up. ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting a hanging pointed part of something ): possibly related to tag 1. Sense 1 of the noun dates from the early 17th cent. ; sense 2 of the noun is a transferred use of English dialect meaning ‘a challenge ’.
Duden Dictionary
dag
dag Abkürzung Dekagramm
DAG
DAG Abkürzung Deutsche Angestelltengewerkschaft
French Dictionary
dag
dag symbole Symbole de décagramme.