Definition, Meaning, Synonyms & Anagrams | English word SWAG


SWAG

Definitions of SWAG

  1. A low point or depression in land; especially, a place where water collects.
  2. To transport stolen goods.
  3. Initialism of scientific/speculative/sophisticated/stupid/some wild-ass guess.
  4. Initialism of Special Warfare Action Group.
  5. (ambitransitive) To (cause to) sway.
  6. (intransitive) To droop; to sag.
  7. (transitive) To decorate (something) with loops of draped fabric.
  8. (transitive) To install (a ceiling fan or light fixture) by means of a long cord running from the ceiling to an outlet, and suspended by hooks or similar.
  9. (window coverings) A loop of draped fabric.
  10. (slang) Style; fashionable appearance or manner.
  11. (obsolete, thieves' cant) A shop and its goods; any quantity of goods. [18th c.]
  12. (uncountable, thieves' cant) Stolen goods; the booty of a burglar or thief; boodle. [18th c.]
  13. (uncountable, informal) Handouts, freebies, or giveaways, often distributed at conventions; merchandise. [late 20th c.]
  14. (countable, Australia, dated) The possessions of a bushman or itinerant worker, tied up in a blanket and carried over the shoulder, sometimes attached to a stick.
  15. (countable, Australia, by extension) A small single-person tent, usually foldable into an integral backpack.
  16. (countable, Australia, New Zealand) A large quantity (of something).
  17. (Australia, ambitransitive) To travel on foot carrying a swag (possessions tied in a blanket). [From 1850s.]
  18. Alternative letter-case form of SWAG.; a wild guess or ballpark estimate.
  19. (nonstandard) Alternative form of swag. (handouts, freebies)
  20. Something that droops like a swag.

6

4

Number of letters

4

Is palindrome

No

4
AG
SW
WA
WAG

50

71

37
AG
AGS
AGW
AS
ASG
ASW
AW
AWG
AWS
GA
GAS
GAW
GS
GSA

Examples of Using SWAG in a Sentence

  • The title was Australian slang for travelling on foot (waltzing) with one's belongings in a "matilda" (swag) slung over one's back.
  • A swagman (also called a swaggie, sundowner or tussocker) was a transient labourer who traveled by foot from farm to farm carrying his belongings in a swag.
  • It features a rotunda used for lectures and catered events, KUPS (the campus radio station), the cafeteria and dining area, Diversions Cafe (a student-run coffee shop), The Cellar (a student-run pizza parlor), and the Logger Store (a gift shop for college swag).
  • Among his best-known works are Hombre, Swag, City Primeval, LaBrava, Glitz, Freaky Deaky, Get Shorty, Rum Punch, Out of Sight and Tishomingo Blues.
  • After humping his swag around much of New South Wales and Queensland through the Great Depression, in 1936, just as his first pieces of writing were being published, Hooton was introduced to the poet Marie E.
  • He descended the hill daily to Heidelberg village for meals before jaunting into the bush with a billycan of milk and swag of paints and canvases.
  • Leopold II says that he did not take any of the government money, that he did not use the revenues as his personal "swag", and that such claims by the "meddlesome American missionaries", "frank British consuls", and "blabbing Belgian-born traitors" are wholly false.
  • Frequently, as the very definition of a femme fatale, she finds it necessary to betray Lupin to get close to the enemy, then after ingratiating herself into his trust will acquire the swag and escape (rarely, she will help to extricate Lupin, Goemon and Jigen from capture or any deadly trouble she put them into, as if to atone).
  • We have pacified some thousands of the islanders and buried them, destroyed their fields; burned their villages, and turned their widows and orphans out-of-doors; furnished heartbreak by exile to some dozens of disagreeable patriots: subjugated the remaining ten millions by Benevolent Assimilation, which is the pious new name of the musket; we have acquired property in the three hundred concubines and other slaves of our business partner, the Sultan of Sulu, and hoisted our protecting flag over that swag.
  • Cattle mustering in the Outback and the eastern ‘Falls’ country of the Great Dividing Range often necessitates days camping out in isolated areas and sleeping in a swag (bedroll) on the ground with limited food choices.
  • During this time Palmer wrote and sometimes produced songs with many other artists – "Cry" with The Mavis's (gold sales and APRA most performed song of the year), "Rip It Up" with 28 Days (gold), "Take Me Away" with Lash (lead track for US movie Freaky Friday with the soundtrack selling in excess of 500,000), "Love Comes Easy" with Vika and Linda (first single from Princess Tabu), "Home Again" and many others with old songwriting partner Mark Seymour (produced first solo album, King Without A Clue) and a swag of other songs with artists as diverse as Michael Spiby of The Badloves, Dan Brodie (producer, Beautiful Crimes, EMI), Tim Henwood of The Androids (producer/writer), Shihad, The Fauves, Amiel ("Tonight"), Lisa Miller, The D4 (writing and producing), Carly Binding (Mushroom/Warner), Luger Boa and Dash and Will.
  • In his swag, he carried copies of works by Henry George, Robert Blatchford, Henry Lawson and other writers on economic and social questions and he thus became largely self-educated.
  • Detective stories were much in vogue because of the popularity of Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories; Barr published the first Sherlock Holmes parody, "Detective Stories Gone Wrong: The Adventures of Sherlaw Kombs" (also known as "The Great Pegram Mystery") in The Idler in 1892, and followed it in 1894 with "The Adventure of the Second Swag".
  • The Variety headline "Swag Grab Nabs Industry Blab" is a parody of their famous "Sticks Nix Hick Pix" headline.
  • Windows were given new drapery – straight panels of patterned silk jacquard in olive and gold, topped by a single festooned swag and side jabots of the same patterned silk, trimmed in tassels.
  • Reviews for the film and the performances were positive; Rajeev Masand praised Roshan and Shroff for their commitment to the action, "bringing swag to the big stylish sequences and a visceral energy to the one-on-one punch-ups in the movie".
  • Prior to the tournament's semi-final, Pepsi (who, as before, is not an ICC sponsor) signed Charulata Patel—an 87-year-old Londoner of Indian descent who had achieved viral notoriety earlier in the tournament for her presence at the India-Bangladesh match—to appear in an extension of its Har Ghoont Mein Swag (Swag in Every Sip) campaign.
  • tends to either reheat familiar material with less fire or tread dangerously close to unrelatable Kingdom Come-like "Look at who's obnoxiously shedding his underdog status!" routines (as on "My Swag").
  • Johnson resented how Fatico and Gotti always treated him like a peon: "They still see me as a gofer and make me handle swag".
  • The following month's diary records Jenkins carrying his swag, pessimistically prospecting and offering rural labour in and around the goldfields town of Castlemaine, where he found many fellow Welshmen.
  • On May 16, Way released his mixtape Swag The Mixtape featuring appearances from Migos, Peewee Longway, Troy Ave, Johnny Cinco, Chief Keef, Pack Strong, Paul Allen, Chella H, Calico Jonez and Kyle Massey.
  • Moreover, the structure contained all the Neoclassical elements of the new Federal style: attenuated pilasters on the central pavilion and two end pavilions that projected forward several feet, swag panels, and delicate fanlights and lunettes.
  • December 21: In VSD, the first chapter of Le magot des Dalton (The Daltons’ swag) by Morris and Vicq is published.
  • Clubs at Barbe High: Band, Choir, Show Choir, 4-H, Book club, Chess, cal-cam, FBLA, FCCLA, FCA, Interact, International Club, Junior State, Key club, Mu Alpha Theta Math Club, National Honor Society, National Art Honor Society, SADD, Speech/Debate, Student Council, Art Club (Formerly YACA), American Sign Language(ASL) Club, Yearbook, Psychology club, Green Bucs, Muslim Student Association, Chemistry Club, Fishing Club, LIFE Club, BETA Club, SWAG Team, Bible Study Club, Spanish Club, Drama Club, Robotics, and Poetry Club and many more.
  • The grill is open seven days a week and serves a standard board of grill fare such as mozzarella sticks, fries, and chicken fingers but additionally serves signature items such as the Lee and Nerden burgers (named after former Faculty Dean Lee Gehrke and Building Manager Dick Nerden, respectively) as well as Too Much Swag (a combination of cheese-covered popcorn chicken and curly fries) and Quinception (a quesadilla with chicken and mozzarella sticks).



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