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in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Commons
Etymology
From Middle English bagge , from Old Norse baggi ( “ bag, pack, satchel, bundle ” ) (whence also Old French bague ( “ bundle, package, sack ” ) ); related to Old Norse bǫggr ( “ harm, shame; load, burden ” ) , of uncertain origin. Perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *bʰak- (compare Welsh baich ( “ load, bundle ” ) , Ancient Greek βάσταγμα ( bástagma , “ load ” ) ).
Pronunciation
Noun
A plastic bag.
bag (plural bags )
A soft container made out of cloth , paper , thin plastic , etc. and open at the top, used to hold food, commodities, and other goods.
Synonyms: ( obsolete ) poke , sack , tote
A container made of leather, plastic, or other material, usually with a handle or handles, in which you carry personal items, or clothes or other things that you need for travelling. Includes shopping bags , schoolbags , suitcases , briefcases , handbags , backpacks , etc.
Hyponyms: sack , pouch , tote , bindle , purse , backpack
( colloquial ) One's preference .
Synonyms: cup of tea , thing ; see also Thesaurus:predilection
Acid House is not my bag : I prefer the more traditional styles of music.
( derogatory ) An ugly woman .
Synonyms: dog , hag
( baseball ) The cloth-covered pillow used for first, second, and third base .
The grounder hit the bag and bounced over the fielder’s head.
( baseball ) First, second, or third base .
He headed back to the bag .
( preceded by the ) A breathalyzer , so named because it formerly had a plastic bag over the end to measure a set amount of breath.
( mathematics ) A collection of objects, disregarding order, but (unlike a set ) in which elements may be repeated.
Synonym: multiset
A bag of three apples could be represented symbolically as {a,a,a}. Or, letting 'r' denote 'red apple' and 'g' denote 'green apple', then a bag of three red apples and two green apples could be denoted as {r,r,r,g,g}.
A sac in animal bodies, containing some fluid or other substance.
the bag of poison in the mouth of some serpents
An udder , especially the pendulous one of a dairy cow .
Synonym: milkbag
Meronym: teats
Her bag is coming in nicely now.
( usually in the plural ) The human female breast .
Synonyms: milkbag , funbag ; see also Thesaurus:breasts
( now historical ) A pouch tied behind a man's head to hold the back-hair of a wig ; a bag wig .
1751 , Smollett , The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle , volume (please specify |volume=I to IV) , London: Harrison and Co., , →OCLC :e had once lost his bag , and a considerable quantity of hair, which had been cut off by some rascal in his passage through Ludgate, during the lord mayor's procession.
1774 , Frances Burney , Journals & Letters , Penguin 2001, 1 December:
He had on a suit of Manchester velvet, Lined with white satten, a Bag , lace Ruffles, and a very handsome sword which the King had given to him.
The quantity of game bagged in a hunt .
( UK ) A unit of measure of cement equal to 94 pounds.
( chiefly in the plural ) A dark circle under the eye , caused by lack of sleep, drug addiction etc.
2013 , Ken Ilgunas, Walden on Wheels: On the Open Road from Debt to Freedom , page 14 :With gravel stuck to my cheek, I pulled myself back in the car, looked in the rearview mirror, and saw, looking back at me, a young man with a pale face and a purple bag under each eye. I looked pitiful [ …]
( informal ) A large number or amount.
( slang )
( countable , uncountable ) In certain phrases: money .
2014 August 28, Sam Wilhoit, quoting OJ da Juiceman , “The Life and Times of OJ da Juiceman”, in VICE , archived from the original on 2023-09-22 :What about the time you got shot eight times and then played a show the same week? ¶ Oh yeah that was beautiful, I mean it was fucked up that I was shot, but as far as goin' to get that bag I'm always gonna go get that bag .
, McLean, V.A.: Gannett , →ISSN , →OCLC , archived from the original on 2023-05-16 : A bag refers to money. So to get a bag or even secure a bag means that you are acquiring money. ]
2019 April 4, “Secure The Bag”, Skripteh (lyrics) , 1:33 :Secure the bag , secure the bag Grab the stash and hit the trap
( US , gay slang , derogatory ) A fellow gay man .
A small envelope that contains drugs, especially narcotics.
( vulgar ) The scrotum .
( Cockney rhyming slang ) £ 1000, a grand .
2017 May 2, Figure Flows (lyrics and music), “Money Right”, in Big Figures ft. Purple, from 1:18 :Coulda got a bag last year But now I get a bag for a verse
2023 June 18, “100mph Freestyle x3”, Clavish (lyrics) , 1:30 :My hoodie cost a bag three, my runners cost a bag two
Derived terms
Descendants
→ Japanese: バッグ
→ Korean: 백 ( baek )
→ Norwegian: bag
Translations
flexible container
Adyghe: шэнтэ ( šɛntɛ )
Afrikaans: sak (af)
Albanian: thes (sq) f , çantë (sq) f , qese (sq) f
Amharic: ቦርሳ ( borsa ) , ጁኒያ ( ǧuniya )
Arabic: حَقِيبَة (ar) f ( ḥaqība ) , جَيْب (ar) m ( jayb ) , كِيس (ar) m or f ( kīs )
Egyptian Arabic: كيس m ( kīs )
Gulf Arabic: جنطة m ( janṭa )
Hijazi Arabic: شَنْطَة f ( šanṭa ) , ( usually plastic or paper ) كيس m ( kīs )
Moroccan Arabic: خنشة f ( ḵanša )
South Levantine Arabic: شنطة f ( šanṭa ) , كيس m ( kis )
Armenian: պայուսակ (hy) ( payusak ) , ( usually plastic or paper ) տոպրակ (hy) ( toprak ) , ( large ) պարկ (hy) ( park )
Assamese: মোনা ( müna ) , টোপোলা ( tüpüla ) , জোলোঙা ( zülüṅa )
Azerbaijani: çanta (az) ( like handbag, sacvoyage etc. ) , torba (az) ( like shopping bag ) , paket ( plastic, paper, carton bag )
Bashkir: тоҡ ( toq ) , ( small ) тоҡсай ( toqsay )
Basque: poltsa
Belarusian: су́мка f ( súmka ) , мяшо́к m ( mjašók ) , то́рба f ( tórba )
Bengali: ব্যাগ (bn) ( bêg ) , থলে (bn) ( thole )
Bulgarian: торба́ (bg) f ( torbá ) , ча́нта (bg) f ( čánta ) , чува́л (bg) m ( čuvál ) , плик (bg) m ( plik ) ( paper ) , кеси́я (bg) f ( kesíja ) ( small, dialectal )
Burmese: အိတ် (my) ( it )
Catalan: bossa (ca) f
Cherokee: ᏕᎦᎵᏗ ( degalidi )
Chichewa: thumba
Chinese:
Cantonese: 袋 (yue) ( doi6-2 ) , 包 ( baau1 )
Dungan: бозы ( bozɨ )
Hokkien: 袋仔 (zh-min-nan) ( tē-á ) , 橐仔 (zh-min-nan) ( lok-á )
Mandarin: 包 (zh) ( bāo ) , 袋 (zh) ( dài )
Wu: 包 ( 1 pau)
Cornish: sagh m
Czech: taška (cs) f , pytel (cs) m
Danish: bærepose c , sæk (da) c , taske (da) c
Dutch: zak (nl) m , tas (nl) f
Dzongkha: ཕད་ཅུང ( phad cung )
Egyptian: (ꜥrf ), (qrft f )
Esperanto: sako
Estonian: kott
Fijian: kato (fj) , beki (fj) , taga (fj)
Finnish: kassi (fi) , laukku (fi) , pussi (fi) , säkki (fi)
French: sac (fr) m , ( regional ) poche (fr) f , cornet (fr) m
Friulian: sac m
Galician: motela f , boria (gl) f , argán m , buzaca f , taleiga f , barxoleta f , bisallo m , bulsa f , faldriqueira (gl) f , falchoca f
Georgian: ტომარა (ka) ( ṭomara ) , პარკი ( ṗarḳi )
German: Beutel (de) m , Tasche (de) f , Sack (de) m
Gothic: 𐌱𐌰𐌻𐌲𐍃 m ( balgs )
Greek: σακούλα (el) f ( sakoúla ) , ( large ) σάκος (el) m ( sákos )
Ancient: θύλακος m ( thúlakos )
Gujarati: થેલી (gu) f ( thelī )
Haitian Creole: sak , sachè
Hausa: jaka
Hebrew: תִּיק (he) m ( tik )
Hindi: बैग (hi) m ( baig ) , खीसा (hi) m ( khīsā ) , झोला (hi) m ( jholā ) , थैला (hi) m ( thailā ) , थैली (hi) f ( thailī )
Hungarian: táska (hu) , zsák (hu) , szatyor (hu) , tasak (hu)
Icelandic: poki (is)
Ido: sako (io)
Indonesian: tas (id)
Irish: mála (ga) m
Italian: sacco (it) m , busta (it) f
Japanese: 袋 (ja) ( ふくろ, fukuro ) , バッグ (ja) ( baggu ) , 鞄 (ja) ( かばん, kaban )
Kabuverdianu: bolsa
Kannada: ಚೀಲ (kn) ( cīla )
Kazakh: сумка ( sumka ) , сөмке ( sömke ) , дорба ( dorba )
Khmer: កប៉ៅ ( kɑpaw )
Korean: 가방 (ko) ( gabang ) , 봉지(封紙) (ko) ( bongji ) , 봉투(封套) (ko) ( bongtu ) , 자루 (ko) ( jaru ) , 백 (ko) ( baek )
Kurdish:
Northern Kurdish: çante (ku) m , tûrik (ku) m , telîs (ku) m , torbe (ku) m , kîs (ku) m
Kyrgyz: сумка (ky) ( sumka ) , мүшөк (ky) ( müşök )
Ladino: bolsa , chanta , ibé , sako , torba
Lao: ກະເປົາ (lo) ( ka pao ) , ຖົງ ( thong )
Latin: follis m , saccus m
Latvian: soma (lv) f , maiss (lv) m
Lezgi: чанта ( čanta )
Limburgish: tuut (li) , zak (li)
Lingala: mofuku
Lithuanian: krepšys m
Macedonian: торба f ( torba ) , кеса f ( kesa ) , чанта f ( čanta ) , ташна f ( tašna )
Malagasy: kitabo (mg)
Malay: beg (ms)
Malayalam: സഞ്ചി (ml) ( sañci )
Maltese: borża f
Manchu: ᡶᡠᠯᡥᡡ ( fulhū ) , ᡶᠠᡩᡠ ( fadu )
Marathi: पिशवी (mr) f ( piśvī ) , बॅग f ( bĕg )
Mbyá Guaraní: voxa
Middle English: bagge , male
Mizo: ip , ịp
Mongolian:
Cyrillic: уут (mn) ( uut ) , шуудай (mn) ( šuudaj )
Mongolian: ᠤᠭᠤᠲᠠ ( uɣuta ) , ᠰᠢᠭᠤᠳᠠᠢ ( siɣudai )
Nepali: झोला ( jholā ) , थैलो ( thailo ) , ब्याग ( byāg )
Norman: puk , pouque
Norwegian:
Bokmål: veske (no) m or f
Nynorsk: veske f
Odia: ବ୍ୟାଗ ( byāga )
Ojibwe: mashkimod
Old English: codd m
Oromo: korojoo
Ossetian: голлаг ( gollag )
Ottoman Turkish: چانطه ( çanta ) , طوربه ( torba ) , كیسه ( kese )
Pannonian Rusyn: торба f ( torba ) , ташка f ( taška ) , мещок m ( meščok )
Pashto: تېله f ( tela )
Persian:
Dari: کِیسَه ( kīsa ) , کِیف ( kīf )
Iranian Persian: کیسِه ( kise ) , کیف (fa) ( kif ) , ساک (fa) ( sâk )
Plautdietsch: Sak m
Polish: torba (pl) f , torebka (pl) f , worek (pl) m
Portuguese: sacola (pt) , saco (pt)
Romagnol: sac m
Romani: gono m
Romanian: pungă (ro) f , sac (ro) m
Russian: су́мка (ru) f ( súmka ) ( with handles ) , мешо́к (ru) m ( mešók ) ( sack ) , паке́т (ru) m ( pakét ) ( of plastic or paper ) , то́рба (ru) f ( tórba )
Scottish Gaelic: màileid f , baga m , poca m , ( bagpipes ) màla
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: то́рба f
Roman: tórba (sh) f
Slovak: taška f , vrece n , vrecko n
Slovene: torba (sl) f
Somali: kiish (so)
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: měch m
Spanish: bolsa (es) f , ( in certain contexts ) saco (es) m , ( Panama - a 'paper bag' in Cuba ) cartucho (es) m , ( Dominican Republic, Ecuador ) funda (es) m , ( Cuba ) jaba (es) f , ( Colombia ) talego (es) m
Swahili: mfuko (sw)
Swedish: väska (sv) c , säck (sv) c , kasse (sv) c
Tagalog: supot (tl) , bulsa , bag
Tajik: сумка (tg) ( sumka ) , киф ( kif ) , халта ( xalta )
Tamil: பை (ta) ( pai )
Tatar: торба (tt) ( torba )
Tedim Chin: ip
Telugu: సంచి (te) ( sañci )
Thai: ถุง (th) ( tǔng ) , กระเป๋า (th) ( grà-bpǎo )
Tibetan: ལྟོ་ཕད ( lto phad ) , སྣོད་ཕད ( snod phad )
Tigrinya: ቦርሳ ( borsa )
Tocharian B: ṣorpor
Tok Pisin: bek
Turkish: çanta (tr) , ( plastic ) poşet (tr) , ( generally paper ) paket (tr) , torba (tr)
Turkmen: bukja (tk) , sumka , torba
Turoyo: ܫ̰ܰܢܛܰܐ ( čanṭa )
Ukrainian: су́мка f ( súmka ) , мішо́к m ( mišók ) ( sack ) , то́рба (uk) f ( tórba ) , чува́л m ( čuvál )
Urdu: بَیگ m ( baig ) , کِھیسا m ( khīsā ) , جھولا m ( jholā ) , تَھیلا m ( thailā ) , کِیسَہ m ( kīsa )
Uyghur: خالتا ( xalta ) , قاپ ( qap ) , سومكا ( somka )
Uzbek: sumka (uz) , qopcha (uz) , xalta (uz)
Venetan: spòrta (vec) f
Vietnamese: bao (vi) (包 ), túi (vi)
Vilamovian: zak
Walloon: saetch (wa) m , saetchot (wa) m ( smaller )
Welsh: cwdyn (cy) m , bag (cy) m
West Frisian: pûde
White Hmong: hnab
Yiddish: זאַק m ( zak ) , זעקל n ( zekl )
Zazaki: heqibe , torbe m , tewre (diq)
Zhuang: suek , duk
Zou: ip
paper (or plastic) container given or sold to shoppers
general term for a container made of leather, plastic, or other material
ugly woman
Chinese:
Mandarin: 醜八怪 / 丑八怪 (zh) ( chǒubāguài ) ( man or woman ) , 醜姑娘 / 丑姑娘 ( chǒu gūniáng )
Czech: ježibaba (cs) f
Danish: sæk (da)
Finnish: rumilus (fi) , kurppa (fi) , haaska (fi)
French: bique (fr) f , mégère (fr) f
Galician: pandorca f , tarasca (gl) f , candonga (gl) f , arpella f , antaruxa f , lurpia (gl) f
Irish: cailleach (ga) f
Norwegian: burugle c
Polish: babol (pl) m , babon m , babsko (pl) n , babsztyl (pl) m , babus m
Portuguese: feia (pt) f , feiosa f
Russian: уро́дина (ru) f ( uródina ) , кики́мора (ru) f ( kikímora ) , страхолю́дина (ru) f ( straxoljúdina ) , дурну́шка (ru) f ( durnúška ) , уро́дка (ru) f ( uródka ) , страши́ла (ru) f ( strašíla ) , крокодил (ru) m ( krokodil )
Swedish: packa (sv)
Zazaki: poset n
baseball: cloth-covered pillow used for first, second, and third base
baseball: first, second, or third base
Translations to be checked
Albanian: (please verify ) qese (sq) f , (please verify ) thes (sq) m
Basque: (please verify ) zorro (eu)
Breton: (please verify ) sac'h (br) m , (please verify ) seier (br) pl
Central Kurdish: (please verify ) کیسە ( kîse )
Hebrew: (please verify ) תיק (he) m ( tyq )
Icelandic: (please verify ) poki (is) m
Indonesian: (please verify ) tas (id)
Interlingua: (please verify ) sacco , (please verify ) bursa , (please verify ) tasca
Korean: (please verify ) 자루 (ko) ( jaru ) , (please verify ) 포대(包袋) (ko) ( podae ) , (please verify ) 가방 (ko) ( gabang )
Kurdish:
Northern Kurdish: (please verify ) çewal (ku) m , (please verify ) tûr (ku) m , (please verify ) torbe (ku) m , (please verify ) kîs (ku) m , (please verify ) telîs (ku) m , (please verify ) çante (ku) m
Marathi: (please verify ) पिशवी (mr) ? ( piśvī )
Persian: (please verify ) کیسه (fa) ( kise )
Serbo-Croatian: (please verify ) kesa (sh) f , (please verify ) vreća f , (please verify ) džak (sh) m
Slovene: (please verify ) torba (sl) , ( informal ) (please verify ) borša
Swahili: (please verify ) mfuko (sw)
Telugu: (please verify ) సంచి (te) ( sañci ) (1)
Turkish: (please verify ) torba (tr)
Vietnamese: ( 1 ) (please verify ) bao (vi) , (please verify ) túi (vi)
Woiwurrung: (please verify ) bilang
Verb
bag (third-person singular simple present bags , present participle bagging , simple past and past participle bagged )
( transitive ) To put into a bag.
( transitive ) To take with oneself, to assume into one's score
( informal ) To catch or kill , especially when fishing or hunting .
We bagged three deer yesterday.
1909 , John Claude White, Sikhim and Bhutan , page 55 :He was a fine specimen, very large and with a beautiful coat, and I wish I had had the luck to bag him.
1936 , F.J. Thwaites , chapter XIV, in The Redemption , Sydney: H. John Edwards, published 1940 , page 147 :"As a matter of fact my thoughts were flashing between Ronda and that man-eating tiger I'm going to bag tomorrow."
To gain possession of something, or to make first claim on something.
2023 May 14, Tan Tam Mei, “Thai election: Early results show opposition parties in the lead”, in The Straits Times :the two opposition groups have bagged almost 300 of the 500 seats contested in the election.
( slang ) To steal .
1950 , C. S. Lewis, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe :"I am sure nobody would mind," said Susan. "It isn't as if we wanted to take them out of the house; we shan't take them even out of the wardrobe." "I never thought of that, Su," said Peter. "Of course, now you put it that way, I see. No one could say you had bagged a coat as long as you leave it in the wardrobe where you found it. And I suppose this whole country is in the wardrobe."
( slang , African-American Vernacular ) To take a woman away with one as a romantic or sexual interest.
2020 , “Those Kinda Nights”, in Music to Be Murdered By , performed by Eminem ft. Ed Sheeran:When we hit the club to go and hell-raise / Probably end up baggin' the cocktail waitress
( slang ) To arrest .
Synonym: nick
2021 January 29, JS x Jtrapz (lyrics and music), “Straight On Smoke”, 0:54–0:56 :Free bro, free bro, we got bagged for a M
( transitive ) To furnish or load with a bag.
1690 , Dryden , Don Sebastian, King of Portugal: , London: Jo. Hindmarsh, , →OCLC , (please specify the page number) :a bee bagged with his honeyed venom
( transitive , medicine ) To provide with artificial ventilation via a bag valve mask (BVM) resuscitator .
( transitive , medicine ) To fit with a bag to collect urine .
1985 , Sol S. Zimmerman, Joan Holter Gildea, Critical Care Pediatrics , page 205 :The patient was bagged for a urine analysis and stat electrolytes were drawn.
To expose exterior shape or physical behaviour resembling that of a bag
( obsolete , transitive , intransitive ) To (cause to) swell or hang down like a full bag.
The skin bags from containing morbid matter.
The brisk wind bagged the sails.
To hang like an empty bag.
2004 , Andrea Levy , chapter 11, in Small Island , London: Review, page 125 :And this uniform did not even fit me so well. But what is a little bagging on the waist and tightness under the arm when you are a gallant member of the British Royal Air Force?
His trousers bag at the knees.
( nautical , intransitive ) To drop away from the correct course .
( obsolete , intransitive ) To become pregnant .
1602 , William Warner , “The Sixt Booke. Chapter XXX.”, in Albions England. A Continued Historie of the Same Kingdome, from the Originals of the First Inhabitants thereof: , 5th edition, London: Edm Bollifant for George Potter, , →OCLC , page 148 :
To forget , ignore , or get rid of .
1977 , The Publication of Poetry and Fiction , page 97 :I may just bag that. I think poets have an obligation to boost the magazines they appear in.
1998 , Ed Burke, Precision Heart Rate Training , page 78 :Well, even if your VCR is still blinking “12:00," I hope you're smart enough to stay inside when it's that cold and just bag that workout.
1999 , United States. Congress. House. Committee on Ways and Means, 105-1 Hearing: Implementation of Fast Track Trade Authority :I will just bag that. If not in the trade bill, that people believe should not interfere with the President's ability to negotiate a trade agreement, how would it be dealt with?
2002 , Glyn Maxwell, Time's Fool: A Tale in Verse , page 296 :'Oh bag that,' said Nelson. 'Do the Edmund stuff — no, cut, we'll do it later, look, it's knocking midnight.'
2007 , Don Pendleton, Ripple Effect , page 322 :“Or we can bag that part of it and just go straight inside,” Bolan suggested.
2014 , Harlan Ellison, Spider Kiss :I'll get the sonofa—” “Listen, just bag that punchout shit for the moment. You've got a problem, and don't forget it.
( slang , African-American Vernacular ) To laugh uncontrollably.
( Australia , slang ) To criticise sarcastically.
Derived terms
Translations
to put into a bag
Bulgarian: слагам в торба ( slagam v torba )
Chinese:
Cantonese: 袋 (yue) ( doi6 )
Dutch: verpakken (nl) , inpakken (nl) , in een zak stoppen (nl) , in een zak steken (nl) (may be Belgian)
Finnish: pussittaa (fi) , panna pussiin , kassittaa (fi) , säkittää (fi)
French: ensacher (fr)
Icelandic: sekkja , setja í poka
Ido: ensakigar (io)
Interlingua: insaccar
Italian: insaccare (it)
Japanese: 鞄に入れる (ja) ( かばんにいれる, kaban ni ireru ) , 袋に入れる (ja) ( ふくろにいれる, fukuro ni ireru )
Maori: whawhao , whao
Marathi: पिशवीत घालणे ( piśvīt ghālṇe ) , बॅगेत घालणे ( bĕget ghālṇe )
Portuguese: ensacar (pt) , empacotar (pt)
Slovak: zabaliť , zbaliť
Swedish: packa (sv)
Turkish: çuvallamak (tr) , poşetlemek (tr) , torbalamak (tr)
Vietnamese: bỏ vào bao
to gain possession of, or to make first claim on
to furnish or load with a bag
to bring a woman on the street
to criticise sarcastically
to provide artificial ventilation
to swell or hang down like a full bag
to hang like an empty bag
Translations to be checked
References
A. F. Niemoeller (1965 January–February) “A Glossary of Homosexual Slang”, in Ralph Ginzburg , editor, Fact , volume 2, number 1, New York, N.Y.: Fact Magazine, Inc., →ISSN , →OCLC , page 25 : “bag n. A fellow homosexual. Derogatory. ”
Anagrams
Antillean Creole
Etymology
From French bague .
Noun
bag
ring
Aromanian
Etymology
Either of substrate origin or from a Vulgar Latin *begō , from Late Latin bīgō , from Latin bīga . Less likely from Greek βάζω ( vázo , “ put in, set on ” ) . May have originally referred to putting animals under a yoke. Compare Romanian băga, bag .
Verb
bag first-singular present indicative (past participle bãgatã or bãgate )
to put , place , apply
to go to bed
See also
Breton
Etymology
Probably tied to Old French bac ( “ flat boat ” ) , itself of obscure origin, although compare Vulgar Latin *baccinum ( “ wide bowl ” ) .
Noun
bag f
boat
Danish
Etymology 1
From Old Norse bak n ( “ back ” ) , from Proto-Germanic *baką , cognate with Norwegian bak , Swedish bak , English back . The preposition is a shortening of Old Norse á bak ( “ on the back of ” ) , compare English back from aback , from Old English onbæc .
Pronunciation
IPA (key ) : /baːˀɣ/ , , , , ( as a preposition or adverb always ) IPA (key ) : ,
Noun
bag c (singular definite bagen , plural indefinite bage )
( anatomy ) behind , bottom , butt , buttocks
seat ( part of clothing )
Declension
Synonyms
Preposition
bag
behind
Adverb
bag
behind
Etymology 2
From the verb to bake .
Pronunciation
Noun
bag n (singular definite baget , plural indefinite bage )
( rare ) pastry
Synonym: bagværk
Declension
Etymology 3
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Pronunciation
Verb
bag
imperative of bage
Haitian Creole
Etymology
From French bague ( “ ring ” ) .
Pronunciation
Noun
bag
ring
Meriam
Noun
bag
cheek
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
Borrowed from English bag , from Old Norse baggi .
Pronunciation
Noun
bag m (definite singular bagen , indefinite plural bager , definite plural bagene )
A purse more or less similar to a bag or sack .
( on a baby carriage ) a detachable part of the carriage to lie on.
References
“bag” in The Bokmål Dictionary .
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
Borrowed from English bag , from Old Norse baggi . Doublet of bagge .
Noun
bag m (definite singular bagen , indefinite plural bagar , definite plural bagane )
A purse more or less similar to a bag or sack .
( on a baby carriage ) a detachable part of the carriage to lie on.
References
“bag” in The Nynorsk Dictionary .
Old Frisian
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *baug ( “ ring ” ) . Cognate to Old English bēag .
Noun
bāg m
a ring
Inflection
Rohingya
Etymology
From Magadhi Prakrit , from Sanskrit व्याघ्र ( vyāghra ) .
Noun
bag
tiger
Romanian
Pronunciation
Verb
bag
first-person singular present indicative / subjunctive of băga
Swedish
Etymology
Borrowed from English bag , from Old Norse baggi .
Noun
bag c
A kind of large bag ; a duffel bag
Declension
Tagalog
Etymology
Borrowed from English bag .
Pronunciation
Noun
bag (Baybayin spelling ᜊᜄ᜔ )
ladies ' bag ; handbag
paper or cloth bag
Synonym: supot
jute sack ( for grains, cereals, etc. )
Synonyms: sako , kustal
Torres Strait Creole
Etymology
From Meriam bag .
Noun
bag
( anatomy , eastern dialect) cheek
Synonyms
Turkmen
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Ultimately from Proto-Turkic *bāg . (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium .)
Noun
bāg (definite accusative bāgy , plural bāglar )
string , lace , shoelace
Declension
Etymology 2
Borrowed from Classical Persian بَاغ ( bāğ ) .
Noun
bag (definite accusative bagy , plural baglar )
garden
Bag ýanýar. ― The garden is on fire.
orchard , grove
park
Declension
Derived terms
Further reading
“bag ” in Enedilim.com
“bag ” in Webonary.org
Welsh
Etymology
From English bag .
Pronunciation
Noun
bag m (plural bagiau )
bag
Derived terms
Mutation
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh. All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
Further reading
R. J. Thomas, G. A. Bevan, P. J. Donovan, A. Hawke et al., editors (1950–present), “bag ”, in Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies
Zhuang
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium . Particularly: “From Proto-Tai *bra:kD?”)
Verb
bag (Sawndip forms 𭄄 or 擗 or 鐴 or 剥 or 𢫦 or 𪫮 or 扒 or 𰄙 or 𢫗 or ⿱拍刀 or 𠛋 or 𫥴 or ⿰扌劈 or 破 , 1957–1982 spelling bag )
to chop ; to split
( of lightning ) to strike
to dive ; to swoop down
to divide
to cut across
Etymology 2
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium .)
Noun
bag (Sawndip forms 𭼈 or ⿸疒百 or 怕 or 剥 , 1957–1982 spelling bag )
mental illness
Adjective
bag (Sawndip forms 𭼈 or ⿸疒百 or 怕 or 剥 , 1957–1982 spelling bag )
crazy ; mad ; insane
Synonym: vangh
Descendants
Verb
bag (Sawndip forms 𭼈 or ⿸疒百 or 怕 or 剥 , 1957–1982 spelling bag )
to become crazy ; to go mad ; to go nuts
Synonym: vangh