scrag
English
Etymology
Perhaps related to Norwegian skragg (a lean person), dialectal Swedish skragge (old and torn thing), Danish skrog (hull, carcass); perhaps related to shrink.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
scrag (plural scrags)
- (archaic) A thin or scrawny person or animal. [from the 16th c.]
- 1946, Mervyn Peake, Titus Groan
- In any event he might have wakened the long scrag by so doing.
- 1946, Mervyn Peake, Titus Groan
- (archaic) The lean end of a neck of mutton; the scrag end.
- (archaic) The neck, especially of a sheep.
- (Scotland) A scrog.
- (Australia, slang, derogatory) A rough or unkempt woman.
- 1998 June 9, Shane, “feed up with noise in cinemas”, in aus.films, Usenet:
- The large guy said that he couldnt sit down the front because of an eye condition, and she said, out loud, "too bad, go down the front".
This was all heard by most of the crowd, 1 guy called her a bitch, i spoke out loud "what a scrag" which her boyfriend heard, he turned around agro like to defend her, when another guy yelled out "if you get agro about that son, ill be over there to show your girlfriend some manners", to which he promplty sat down :-), but after that she put her feet up on the seat in front of her !!
- 1999 December 18, Kenny, “The Observer AND the Times: Episode 3.7 Revelations”, in aus.tv.buffy, Usenet:
- Post scrag fight, Buffy is sweetness and light in her cardy and teeny tiny handbag (plus blonde hair) contrasting with Faith who is lying in bed with her kill-me-thrill-me cutoff shorts (plus brunette hair).
- 2019 June 2, Peter Lucas, “The Chief takes a hit”, in alt.ozdebate, Usenet:
- Get a life, you stupid scrag.
-
- A ragged, stunted tree or branch.
Verb
scrag (third-person singular simple present scrags, present participle scragging, simple past and past participle scragged)
- (obsolete, colloquial) To hang on a gallows, or to strangle or garotte or choke.
- Pall Mall Magazine
- An enthusiastic mob will scrag me to a certainty the day war breaks out.
- 1991, Stephen Fry, The Liar, p. 37:
- Adrian thought it worth while to try out his new slang... ‘That's beastly talk, Thompson. Jolly well take it back or expect a good scragging.’
- Pall Mall Magazine
- To harass, to manhandle.
- 1958, P. G. Wodehouse, Cocktail Time, Chapter 15
- '...I urged him ... to ... try the Ickenham System ... a little thing I knocked together in my bachelor days ... it has a good many points in common with all-in wrestling and osteopathy. I generally recommend it to diffident wooers and it always works like magic...'
- Johnny stared.
- 'You mean you told McMurdo to ... scrag her?'
- 1958, P. G. Wodehouse, Cocktail Time, Chapter 15
- To kill or destroy.
- 1899, Rudyard Kipling, “9 Slaves of the Lamp II”, in Stalky & Co., Project Gutenberg ebook edition, page 165:
- "I abolished him—privatim—scragged him."
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Translations
to choke
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