. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
you have here. The definition of the word
will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
Etymology
Probably North Germanic origin. This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.
Pronunciation
Adjective
lag
Late .
1592 , William Shakespeare, King Richard III :Some tardy cripple bore the countermand, / That came too lag to see him buried.
( obsolete ) Last; long-delayed.
c. 1597 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The First Part of Henry the Fourth, ”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies (First Folio ), London: Isaac Iaggard , and Ed Blount , published 1623 , →OCLC , :the lag end of my life
Last made; hence, made of refuse; inferior.
1690 , John Dryden , Don Sebastian, King of Portugal :We know your thoughts of us, that laymen are lag souls, and rubbish of remaining clay.
Translations
Noun
lag (countable and uncountable , plural lags )
( countable ) A gap , a delay ; an interval created by something not keeping up; a latency .
1995 , Donald R. DeGlopper, “Introduction”, in Lukang: Commerce and Community in a Chinese City , State University of New York Press , →ISBN , →LCCN , →OCLC , page 5:Although this work is now presented to the world at large, people who read through it before publication severally raised some issues that should be addressed. These resolve around the lag between the field research and the publication of the monograph, a period of rather more than two decades; the use or non-use of various academic forms of terminology, frames of reference, modes of analysis, or "theoretical paradigms"; and my use of the present tense to describe a place that is most certainly not that way now.
2004 May 10, The New Yorker Online, :During the Second World War, for instance, the Washington Senators had a starting rotation that included four knuckleball pitchers. But, still, I think that some of that was just a generational lag .
( uncountable ) Delay ; latency .
1999 , Loyd Case, Building the ultimate game PC :Whatever the symptom, lag is a drag. But what causes it? One cause is delays in getting the data from your PC to the game server.
2001 , Patricia M. Wallace, The psychology of the Internet :When the lag is low, 2 or 3 seconds perhaps, Internet chatters seem reasonably content.
2002 , Marty Cortinas, Clifford Colby, The Macintosh bible :Latency, or lag , is an unavoidable part of Internet gaming.
( UK , Ireland , slang , archaic ) One sentenced to transportation for a crime .
( UK , Ireland , slang ) A prisoner , a criminal .
1934 , P. G. Wodehouse , Thank You, Jeeves :On both these occasions I had ended up behind the bars, and you might suppose that an old lag like myself would have been getting used to it by now.
1986 , John le Carré , A Perfect Spy :He sat with his great head tipped forward, scowling with a lag's sullenness, and I swear he had closed off his hearing with his thinking and hadn't heard us coming. 'Father,' said Pym.
( slang ) A period of imprisonment .
2017 , Anna Leask, Behind Bars: Real-life stories from inside New Zealand's prisons :I wasn't scared any more; the second lag wasn't easy, but I wasn't really scared of anything. [ …] So in my later lags , when I walked into prison everyone had heard about me.
( snooker ) A method of deciding which player is to start. Both players simultaneously strike a cue ball from the baulk line to hit the top cushion and rebound down the table; the player whose ball finishes closest to the baulk cushion wins.
One who lags; that which comes in last.
1725 , Homer , “Book IX”, in [William Broome ], transl., The Odyssey of Homer. , volume II, London: Bernard Lintot , →OCLC , page 226 , line 526 :the lag of all the flock
The fag-end ; the rump ; hence, the lowest class.
c. 1605–1608 , William Shakespeare, “The Life of Tymon of Athens ”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies (First Folio ), London: Isaac Iaggard , and Ed Blount , published 1623 , →OCLC , , page 89 , column 2:The reſt of your Fees, O Gods, the Senators of Athens, together with the common lagge of People, what is amiſſe in them, you Gods, make ſuteable for deſtruction.
A stave of a cask, drum, etc.; especially ( engineering ) one of the narrow boards or staves forming the covering of a cylindrical object, such as a boiler, or the cylinder of a carding machine or steam engine.
A bird, the greylag .
Usage notes
In casual use, lag and latency are used synonymously for "time delay between initiating an action and the effect", with lag being more casual. In formal use, latency is the technical term, while lag is used when latency is greater than usual, particularly in internet gaming. When used as a comparative to refer to the distance between moving objects lag refers to a moving object that has not yet reached the reference object position, whether linear or rotational. The term latency is not used in technical jargon for linear or rotational distance. The neutral term displacement can be used ambiguously and may refer to the distance between objects without indicating direction. In this use, lag , lags , and lagging are the complements of lead , leads , and leading . For example, For any AC power system, at all reactive loads, the current waveform has a phase displacement or power factor to the voltage. An inductive load has a lagging power factor, while a capacitive load has a leading PF .
Synonyms
Derived terms
Descendants
Translations
(Internet) bad connection, loss of connection
Chinese:
Mandarin: 卡 (zh) ( kǎ ) ( slang/colloquial )
Finnish: viive (fi) , lagi (fi) ( slang )
Greek: καθυστέρηση (el) f ( kathystérisi ) , χρονοτριβή (el) f ( chronotriví )
Icelandic: ( slang ) lagg , hökt n , töf f , seinkun (is) f
Polish: lag (pl) m
Portuguese: demora (pt) , atraso (pt) m
Russian: лаг (ru) m ( lag ) , пролагивание m ( prolagivanije )
Spanish: demora (es) f , retraso (es) m , lag (es) m , retardo (es) m
(British, slang) a prisoner, a criminal
Verb
lag (third-person singular simple present lags , present participle lagging , simple past and past participle lagged )
To fail to keep up (the pace), to fall behind.
1616 , George Chapman, The Odysseys of Homer :Lazy beast! / Why last art thou now? Thou hast never used / To lag thus hindmost
1717 , The Metamorphoses of Ovid translated into English verse under the direction of Sir Samuel Garth by John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison, William Congreve and other eminent hands
While he, whose tardy feet had lagg'd behind, / Was doom'd the sad reward of death to find.
1798 , Samuel Taylor Coleridge , The Rime of the Ancient Mariner in seven parts :Brown skeletons of leaves that lag / My forest-brook along
2004 April 5, The New Yorker, :Over the next fifty years, by most indicators dear to economists, the country remained the richest in the world. But by another set of numbers—longevity and income inequality—it began to lag behind Northern Europe and Japan.
To cover (for example, pipes) with felt strips or similar material ( referring to a time lag effect in thermal transfer ) .
1941 April, “British Locomotive Developments”, in Railway Magazine , page 173 :Spun glass mattresses are used for lagging the boiler, which has three Ross pop safety valves on the front ring.
c. 1974 , Philip Larkin , The Building :Outside seems old enough: / Red brick, lagged pipes, and someone walking by it / Out to the car park, free.
( computing , informal , video games ) To respond slowly.
My phone is starting to lag .
( UK , slang , archaic ) To transport as a punishment for crime .
( UK , slang , archaic ) To arrest or apprehend .
1925 July – 1926 May , A[rthur] Conan Doyle , “(please specify the chapter number) ”, in The Land of Mist (eBook no. 0601351h.html), Australia: Project Gutenberg Australia , published April 2019:"We must get the old dear out," said Lord Roxton to Malone. "He'll be had for manslaughter if we don't. What I mean, he's not responsible - he'll sock someone and be lagged for it."
( transitive ) To cause to lag; to slacken.
1632 , Thomas Heywood , The Iron Age :The weight would lagge thee that art wont to flye.
Derived terms
Descendants
Translations
To fall behind
Arabic:
Bulgarian: изоставам (bg) ( izostavam )
Chinese:
Mandarin: 落後 / 落后 (zh) ( luòhòu )
Finnish: jäädä jälkeen
French: rester en arrière , être en retard
German: zurückbleiben (de) , zurückfallen (de)
Greek: καθυστερώ (el) ( kathysteró ) , χρονοτριβώ (el) ( chronotrivó )
Ancient: ὑστερέω ( husteréō )
Italian: rimanere indietro
Japanese: 立ち遅れる ( たちおくれる, tachiokureru )
Maori: akutō , tonanawe , takamuri , komutu , whetō , whētōtō , whakawhetoto
Russian: отстава́ть (ru) impf ( otstavátʹ ) , отста́ть (ru) pf ( otstátʹ ) , опа́здывать (ru) impf ( opázdyvatʹ ) , опозда́ть (ru) pf ( opozdátʹ )
Spanish: rezagar (es) , retrasar (es)
Swedish: sacka (sv)
To cause to lag; to slacken
See also
Further reading
Anagrams
AGL , ALG , Alg. , GAL , GLA , Gal , Gal. , LGA , gal , gal. , μGal
Afrikaans
Etymology
From Dutch lachen .
Pronunciation
Verb
lag (present lag , present participle laggende , past participle gelag )
to laugh
Albanian
Etymology 1
From Proto-Albanian *lauga , from Proto-Indo-European *lowg- (compare Old Norse laug ( “ hot spring, bath ” ) , Latvian luga ( “ marshy deposit, silt ” ) , Serbo-Croatian lȕža ( “ puddle, pool ” ) ).
Verb
lag (aorist laga , participle lagur )
to wet , moisten
( colloquial ) to water
( geography ) to wash land (of a body of water)
Derived terms
Etymology 2
From Proto-Albanian *lag- , from Proto-Indo-European *legʰ- ( “ to lay, lie (down) ” ) . Cognate with Ancient Greek λόχος ( lókhos , “ ambush, ambuscade, armed band ” ) , Gothic 𐌻𐌰𐌲𐌾𐌰𐌽 ( lagjan , “ to lay ” ) . Singular form of lagje .
Noun
lag m
troop , band , encampment
Chinese
Etymology
From English lag .
Pronunciation
Verb
lag
( Hong Kong Cantonese , computing ) to lag
Adjective
lag
( Hong Kong Cantonese , computing ) laggy
Danish
Etymology
From Old Norse lag , from Proto-Germanic *lagą . Doublet of lav ( “ guild ” ) and lov ( “ law ” ) .
Pronunciation
Noun
lag n (singular definite laget , plural indefinite lag )
layer , coat ( a coherent mass spread on the top or on the outside of something else )
( sociology ) class , stratum ( class of society with similar status )
( geology ) stratum ( layer of sedimentary rock )
Declension
Dutch
Pronunciation
Verb
lag
singular past indicative of liggen
Anagrams
Faroese
Etymology
From Old Norse lag .
Pronunciation
Noun
lag n (genitive singular lags , plural løg )
layer
( in compounds ) what belongs together (company , union )
regularity , order
skill , capability
hann hevur gott lag á tí.
he has good skills in that
method , system
importance
tað liggur einki lag á. This is not important .
mood
tað er einki lag á honum. He is in a bad mood .
design , shape
melody
Declension
Derived terms
German
Pronunciation
Verb
lag
first / third-person singular preterite of liegen
Gothic
Romanization
lag
Romanization of 𐌻𐌰𐌲
Icelandic
Etymology
From Old Norse lag .
Pronunciation
Noun
lag n (genitive singular lags , nominative plural lög )
layer
( geology ) stratum
tune , song
order
thrust , stab
good method , knack
Declension
Irish
Etymology
From Old Irish lac , from Proto-Celtic *laggos , from Proto-Indo-European *(s)leh₁g- , compare English slack and Latin laxus ( “ slack ” ) .
Pronunciation
Adjective
lag (genitive singular masculine laig , genitive singular feminine laige , plural laga , comparative laige )
weak
Synonym: tláith
Declension
Singular
Plural (m/f )
Positive
Masculine
Feminine
(strong noun )
(weak noun )
Nominative
lag
lag
laga
Vocative
laig
laga
Genitive
laige
laga
lag
Dative
lag
lag ;laig ( archaic )
laga
Comparative
níos laige
Superlative
is laige
Derived terms
References
Further reading
Maltese
Etymology
Borrowed from Sicilian lagu , from Latin lacus .
Pronunciation
Noun
lag m (plural lagi )
lake
Synonym: għadira
Norwegian Bokmål
National football team of Norway , before the match with Bulgaria in 2015.
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Old Norse lag ( “ layer; companionship ” ) , from Proto-Germanic *lagą ( “ situation; law ” ) , from Proto-Indo-European *legʰ- ( “ to lie ” ) .
Noun
lag n (definite singular laget , indefinite plural lag , definite plural laga or lagene )
a layer ( a single thickness of some material covering a surface )
1874 , Henrik Ibsen , Peer Gynt , page 9:lag af tåger layers of mists
1904 , Hans E. Kinck , Emigranter , page 121 :[de fykende snøkorn] roed sig lag paa lag calmed layer upon layer
2005 , Elisabeth Botterli et al. , Madonna-gåten :de [hadde] nettopp byttet vinduer. Tre lag isolerglass they just changed windows. Three layers of insulating glass
2008 , Kari Bøge , Komponisten :selv krystall kan sendes i posten om en pakker det i mange nok lag med bobleplast even crystal can be sent in the mail if one packs it in many enough layers of bubble wrap
2010 , Margit Vea, Kjøkkenpatruljen :bruk en liten sikt og dryss et tynt lag med melis over pannekaken use a small sieve and sprinkle a thin layer of icing sugar over the pancake
2011 , Lars Mytting, Hel ved , page 44 :harde tresorter [på peisen] om kvelden … gir et fint lag glør som fyrer opp neste ilegg hard woods in the evening… gives a nice layer of embers that fires up the next insert
2011 , Ingeborg Arvola , Grisehjerter :de ytterste lagene av en løk the outer layers of an onion
2012 , Line Nyborg, Du vet ikke hvem jeg er :lag på lag med tapet layer upon layer of wallpaper
2012 , Britt Karin Larsen , Før snøen kommer :lag på lag med plagg layer upon layer of garments
2021 , Monica Isakstuen , Mine venner , page 167 :jeg liker et tynt lag smør under pålegget I like a thin layer of butter under the topping
( masonry ) a horizontal row of bricks (in a masonry ) bounded by two horizontal joints
( chiefly geology ) a horizontal widespread mass of soil or rock , formed by deposition
1897 , Fridtjof Nansen , Fram over Polhavet I , page 89 :lagene i fjeldet staar paa ende, er brukket og bølet the layers of the rock stand on end, are broken and bulging
( colloquial ) a layer ; part , section ( part of a whole that one imagines divided along horizontal lines )
1884 , Alexander L. Kielland , Fortuna , page 148 :i dette land har de øvre lag staaet næsten stille i et par generationer in this country the upper layers have stood almost still for a few generations
1911 , Sigrid Undset , Jenny , page 217 :de dypeste lag i deres begges væsen the deepest layers of their being
2008 , Kurt Sweeney, Kjegler :siste lag med toleranse flerres vekk last layer of tolerance several away
the correct or usual way in which something is arranged; correct and regular order, condition , etc.
2010 , Peter Serck, Natten :jeg [tok det] som et tegn på at vårt venninneforhold ennå sto ved lag I as a sign that our friendship was still standing
1929 , Sverre Steen , Ferd og fest , page 205 :hver ferdemann hadde til plikt å legge en sten til varden når han fór forbi for at den kunde holdes ved lag og helst bli større each traveler had a duty to lay a stone at the cairn when he passed by so that it could be kept at bay and preferably become larger
1994 , Atle Næss , Østre linje :krona var av samme verdi som før krigen og verden skulle sånn sett være i lage igjen the krona was of the same value as before the war and the world was thus to be regular again
1879 , Peter Christen Asbjørnsen , Norske Folke- og Huldre-Eventyr , page 108 :huset kom saa rent af lage, at det gav sig i alle laft the house came so clean of the ordinary, that it gave way in every nook and cranny
1917 , Knut Hamsun , Markens Grøde I , page 91 :hun hadde stelt alt av lage for dem she had taken care of everything regular for them
1909 , Henrik Ibsen , Efterladte Skrifter I , page 405 :verden er af lave the world is of the ordinary
1873 , Henrik Ibsen , Kærlighedens komedie , page 91 :bring ham ej af lave do not disturb him
1879 , Peter Christen Asbjørnsen , Norske Folke- og Huldre-Eventyr , page 35 :saa lagde jeg i paa nyt lag then I made it all over again
stå ved lag ― still have its validity; remain unchanged
holde ved lag ― preserve something in old custom
være/komme i lag/lage ― be/come in its usual custom
være/komme av lage ― be/get out of their usual or proper custom
på nytt lag ― again; with new strength/courage
normal and good mood or temperament
1907 , Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson , Bjørnstjerne Bjørnsons fortællinger , page 301 :[han] var ikke til at få i lag was not to get in a good mood
1896 , Thomas Krag , Ada Wilde , page 241 :fruen var i bedre lav forrige gang the lady was in a better mood last time
1918 , Gabriel Scott , Kilden , page 22 :fisken er i det rigtige lave the fish is in the real temperament
1927 , Regine Normann , Nordlandsnatt , page 35 :hun [var] amper og ute av lag she amp and out of the ordinary mood
1929 , Johan Bojer , Folk ved sjøen , page 241 :[han måtte] skøie med henne, når han var i laget til det joke with her, when he was in the mood for it
Synonym: godlag
Antonym: ulag
( etiquette ) correct and polite language or manner
1852 , Henrik Wergeland , Samlede Skrifter II , page 20 :aaretakten kan jeg kjende: uden regel, uden lag the rate of the year I can know: without rule, without manners
1890 , Henrik Ibsen , Hedda Gabler , page 4:jeg er rigtig så ræd for, at jeg ikke skal gøre det til lags for den unge fruen I'm really so scared I'm not going to make it fun for the young lady
1918 , Gabriel Scott , Kilden , page 101 :[hun] vet ikke hvordan hun bedst skal te sig for at være Markus til lag does not know how best to behave in order to make Markus satisfied
2007 , Ragnhild Nilstun , Min lange reise ender her :Hanna fikk tøye seg i alle retninger, forsøkte å gjøre dem alle til lags Hanna had to stretch in all directions, trying to please them all
være/gjøre noen til lag(s) ― be/act so that it suits someone; that someone is satisfied
Used to indicate an approximate amount of something.
2010 , Tore Rem, Født til frihet , page 9:huset bør være verdt et sted mellom 120 og 150 000 kroner, men er beheftet med om lag 60 000 i lån The house should be worth somewhere between 120 and 150,000 kroner, but is encumbered with about 60,000 in loans
Coordinate terms: om lag , omtrent
( chiefly dialectal ) Used to indicate an approximate amount of something, with the prepositions på ( “ on ” ) and ved ( “ by ” ) .
1907 , Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson , Bjørnstjerne Bjørnsons fortællinger , page 98 :hvem på lag er den stærkeste der over på eders side? just about who is the strongest over there on your side?
1892 , Henrik Ibsen , Bygmester Solness , page 71 :[den 19. september eller] så ved lag so approximately
1897 , Fridtjof Nansen , Fram over Polhavet I , page 524 :vore nye askekjælker var nu paa lag færdige our new ash sledges were now about finished
1918 , Gabriel Scott , Kilden , page 142 :han steger ut paa det lav klokken fire he steps out at about four o'clock
1960 , Johan Bojer , Samlede verker IV , page 165 :her blir mest som et sanatorium paa lag here is mostly like a sanatorium approximately
1960 , Johan Bojer , Vår egen stamme , page 93 :kor på lag var det han strauk choir about was what he flunked
Used in the definite form with the preposition i (in) and a superlative adjective to indicate a high degree of something.
1918 , Gabriel Scott , Kilden , page 164 :benstellet [på hummeren] er i tyndeste laget the tooth frame is very thin
1920 , Peter Egge , Inde i Fjordene , page 353 :Siri var i seneste laget Siri was very late
1992 , Torgrim Eggen , Gjeld , page 266 :anda er i feteste laget for ham, men den er nydelig tilberedt the duck is too fat for him, but it is beautifully cooked
1988 , Arild Nyquist , Giacomettis forunderlige reise :denne historien virket litt i eventyrligste laget – for å si det pent this story seemed a bit in the more adventurous theme - to say the least
2002 , Geir Pollen , Når den gule solen brenner :spillelæreren syntes det var i tidligste laget å gi seg i kast med Mozarts klarinettkonsert the playing teacher thought it was a bit early to embark on Mozart's clarinet concerto
( chiefly dialectal ) manner ; being , appearance ( characteristic mode of acting or behaving )
1925 , Sigrid Undset , Olav Audunssøn i Hestviken I , page 207 :[hun likte] hans rolige, godlidende lag his calm, good-natured way of being
1925 , Peter Egge , Hansine Solstad , page 96 :[det var] noget i alt hans lag som pekte paa at han visste hvem han var something in all his manners that pointed out that he knew who he was
an individual and natural way of treating people ; way of approaching something
1877 , Jørgen Moe , Samlede Skrifter II , page 16 :at bringe folkets fortællere til aabent og uforbeholdent at meddele sig – forudsætter et eget lag at behandle dem paa to bring the narrators of the people to openly and unreservedly communicate - presupposes a separate way to treat them on
1992 , Eilert Sundt , Om giftermål i Norge , page 214 :stenbrydere og sådan grove arbeidsmænd have så lidet lag på at indrette det hyggeligt for sig i det logement quarrymen and such rude workers have so little ways to arrange it cozy for themselves in that lodging
1917 , Knut Hamsun , Markens Grøde I , page 133 :hun hadde lag med børn she had a way with children
1920 , Sigrid Undset , Kransen , page 194 :alle vitenskaper og kunster tror jeg den manden hadde faat laget for av Gud selv all sciences and arts I believe the man had been made for by God himself
1923 , Hans Aanrud , Fortællinger I , page 152 :han havde faaet et sligt lag til at snakke passelig grovt med kvindfolkene he had got such a way to talk suitably rudely with the women
1990 , Atle Næss , Kraften som beveger :hun hadde et særlig lag med supper, de var kraftige og mettende she had a special way with soups, they were powerful and filling
2020 , Tove Nilsen , Den eneste broren , page 163 :du har laget, jeg merker det, du har laget you have a way with it, I notice it, you have a way
a gathering , company ; togetherness , companionship
1926 , Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson , Samlede Digte I , page 27 :[vi] legte sammen i skog og lage’ played together in the woods and in company
1917 , Hans Aanrud , Fortællinger for barn I , page 231 :Astrid satte sig bort til bordet i lag med jenterne Astrid sat down at the table together with the girls
1927 , Johan Bojer , Samlede verker III , page 18 :tak for laget i sommer da! thanks for the company this summer then!
1915 , Anders Krogvig , Fra det nationale gjennembruds tid. Breve fra Jørgen Moe til P. Chr. Asbjørnsen og andre , page 15 :[romjulen gikk] med lag og lystighet, dans og optog, julebukker og lekemoro with companionship and merriment, dancing and processions, Yule goats and playing
1923 , Hans Aanrud , Fortællinger I , page 10 :nei, han Far faar bli; den skammen vil jeg [dvs. Iver Langseth] ikke ha, at’n Far har brudt lag paa Langseth no, father may stay; that shame I will not have, that father has left Langseth
1879 , Peter Christen Asbjørnsen , Norske Folke- og Huldre-Eventyr , page 331 :paa hjemveien kom han i lag med grander og bygdefolk on the way home he came in contact with grander and villagers
1917 , Knut Hamsun , Markens Grøde II , page 18 :jeg var tilfreds jeg kunde slaa lag med dig I was satisfied I could follow with you
1908 , Knut Hamsun , Rosa , page 327 :hun møtte ham paa vejen og slog sig i lag med ham she met him on the road and joined him
1917 , Knut Hamsun , Markens Grøde II , page 27 :hun hadde opdaget hvad han var i lag med she had discovered what he was up to
bryte lag ― break up from; leave a company
være/komme i lag (med) ― become joined (with)
slå/gjøre lag med ― follow along
slå seg i lag med ― join in; join with
gi seg i lag med; være i lag med ― be/give in to
a flock , company , circle of people ( united in togetherness, socializing, friendship or common profession )
1830 , Conrad N. Schwach, Erindringer af mit Liv indtil Ankomsten til Throndhjem , page 329 :vi skulde i al privat stilhed holde et lag we were to keep a company in all private silence
1917 , Halfdan Kjerulf , Av hans efterladte papirer 1831–1847 , page 264 :det var et sluttet lag af lidt over 50 personer it was a closed gathering of just over 50 people
1873 , Henrik Ibsen , Hærmændene på Helgeland , page 78 :den ypperste mand i laget the supreme man in the flock
1873 , Henrik Ibsen , Kærlighedens komedie , page 100 :forlovet mand er tabt for venners lag an engaged man is lost of friends' company
1885 , Henrik Ibsen , Brand , page 13 :derborte står det glade lag over there stands the happy group of people
1907 , Bernt Lie , Mot Overmagt , page 35 :i godt lag og ved et godt glas punsch in good company and by a good glass of punch
1926 , Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson , Samlede Digte II , page 229 :vi gik fræm i samlet lag we went forward in unison
1874 , Henrik Ibsen , De unges forbund , page 96 :så kom der liv i laget then came life in the gathering
1874 , Henrik Ibsen , Peer Gynt , page 149 :jeg følte mig aldrig hjemme i laget, og aldrig rigtig som mand af faget I never felt at home in the company, and never really as a man of the trade
1885 , Henrik Ibsen , Brand , page 256 :vi er små, er sidst i laget we are small, are last in the flock
2005 , Universitas :[han] har valgt å gi seg etter fire år som rektor [ved Universitetet i Oslo]. Han har ikke lagt skjul på at kona har hatt et ord med i laget has chosen to resign after four years as rector . He has made no secret of the fact that his wife has had a say in the decision
1907 , Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson , Bjørnstjerne Bjørnsons fortællinger , page 73 :«God kveld!» sagde Margit, … «og signe laget!» "Good evening!" said Margit, … "and greetings!"
ha et ord med i laget ― have an influence in a decision
gi sitt ord med i laget ― speak with; give their effort
signe laget ― greeting for a group of people (literally: bless the company)
godt lag gjør kortere dag ― time flies in good company
a festive gathering or company; party
1871 , Peter Christen Asbjørnsen , Norske Folke-eventyr , page 166 :[de] holdt bedt lag og kastud hver dag had a wild party with people getting thrown out every day
1885 , Henrik Ibsen , Brand , page 18 :så holdt han lag tre døgn tilende then he kept company for three days
1874 , Henrik Ibsen , Peer Gynt , page 66 :det glittrer fra hver en rude; der er lag i den store sal it glitters from each a pane; there are parties in the great hall
1907 , Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson , Bjørnstjerne Bjørnsons fortællinger , page 24 :moderen havde ikke været i lag, siden hun var jente the mother had not been in a lively gathering since she was a girl
a group of people working together; a team
2001 , Marianne Bjørneboe (Editor), Filmfortellere , page 51 :[produksjonsselskapet] ville gjerne sette sammen et lag for å utvikle tittelnovellen til et filmmanuskript, men hadde klare ambisjoner om å gjøre dette på en uortodoks måte wanted to put together a team to develop the title story into a film script, but had clear ambitions to do so in an unorthodox way
2009 , Kjetil Stensvik Østli, Politi og røver :McCauley leder et lag av kjeltringer som behersker flere håndverk. Kortsvindel, sprengstoff, betongsaging, åpning av safer, spaning McCauley leads a team of thugs who master several crafts. Card fraud, explosives, concrete sawing, opening of safes, reconnaissance
Synonyms: arbeidslag , team
( military ) a squad ( smallest division unit of a troop; usually of about ten members )
( sports ) a sports team ( a group (of at least two), which during a competition acts as a whole )
1933 , Tidens Tegn , page 8:de danske aviser roser alle det norske lag the Danish newspapers all praise the #Norwegian team
1933 , Christian A. R. Christensen , Det hendte igår , page 84 :antallet av tilsluttede lokale lag er steget fra 720 til over 1 500 the number of affiliated local teams has risen from 720 to over 1,500
2004 , Dag Solstad , Artikler 1993–2004 :laget [Lillestrøm] rykket først opp i hovedserien i 1951/52-sesongen, fem sesonger etter at hovedserien hadde startet the team first moved up in the main series in the 1951/52 season, five seasons after the main series had started
2003 March 6, Fædrelandsvennen :det er ikke første gang spøkefuglen Robbie [Williams] utgir seg for å ‘spille på det andre laget’. Under en konsert har han presentert sin tidligere låtskriver Guy Chambers som sin elsker this is not the first time the joker Robbie has pretended to 'play for the other team'. During a concert, he presented his former songwriter Guy Chambers as his lover
2016 September 17, Nordlys :jeg er anvendelig og kan ta en for laget med å spille i ny posisjon [høyre back] I am useful and can take one for the team to play in a new position
2017 January 18, Nettavisen :vi bør ta en for laget og akseptere at alkohol ikke selges overalt fordi vi vet at økt tilgjengelighet fører til mye utrygghet we should take one for the team and accept that alcohol is not sold everywhere because we know that increased availability leads to a lot of insecurity
spille på det andre laget ― play for the other team ; be gay
ta en for laget ― take one for the team
an association ( a group of persons associated for a common purpose; an organization )
( military , nautical ) a row of cannons at the same height in the broadside of warships
1875 , Henrik Ibsen , Digte , page 100 :længre vest er en skumklædt grund, der gav [yachten] det glatte lag further west is a foam-covered ground that gave the shooting cannons
1929 , Olaf Benneche , Tordenskjold , page 116 :– Klar ved kanonene der! Gi ham det glatte lag, fyr! - Ready for the cannons there! Give him the shooting cannons, fire!
1873 , Henrik Ibsen , Kærlighedens komedie , page 137 :fast aldrig var vi enige, vi gav hinanden tidt det glatte lag though we never agreed, we often gave each other the full truth
1946 , Joachim Holst-Jensen , Holst-Jensen ruller opp , page 95 :da tok sinnet meg, jeg riposterte i anmelderens egen avis og ga ham det glatte lag then the mind took me, I reposted in the reviewer's own newspaper and gave him the honest truth
1995 , John Ege, Dominoklubben :jeg ga han det glatte lag, spurte om han hadde lært å kjøre drosje i Kardemomme by I gave him the harsh truth, asked if he had learned to drive a taxi in Cardamom town
gi (noen) det glatte lag ― fire all the cannons on one side of the ship at once; bombard someone with harsh truths
Derived terms
Etymology 2
From Old Norse lǫg ( “ fate, situation; law ” ) , from lag ( “ layer; companionship ” ) , from Proto-Germanic *lagą ( “ situation; law ” ) , from Proto-Indo-European *legʰ- ( “ to lie ” ) .
Noun
lag m (definite singular lagen , indefinite plural lager , definite plural lagene )
( historical , Norway) a district ( area which is under common law and has common principal Things )
Synonym: distrikt
Trøndelag, Gulatingslagen, Frostatingslagen Trøndelag, Gulathing Law, Frostathing Law
( obsolete ) a law ( the body of binding rules and regulations, customs and standards established in a community by its legislative and judicial authorities )
Synonym: lov
(Can we date this quote?) , Henrik Wergeland , Samlede Skrifter VI,1 , page 62 :skotske lag og drot Scottish law and king
Derived terms
Etymology 3
Verb
lag
imperative of lage
References
Anagrams
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
From Old Norse lag , from Proto-Germanic *lagą .
Pronunciation
Noun
lag n (definite singular laget , indefinite plural lag , definite plural laga )
layer
team (group of people)
mood
( military ) a squad
Synonyms
Derived terms
Verb
lag
imperative of laga
References
“lag” in The Nynorsk Dictionary .
Old Norse
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *lagą , from Proto-Indo-European *legʰ- .
Noun
lag n (genitive lags , plural lǫg )
stratum , layer
due place , right position
companionship , fellowship
living together
cohabitation
market price , tax
thrust , stab (with a knife, sword or spear)
air , tune
Declension
Declension of lag (strong a -stem)
Derived terms
Descendants
References
lag in A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic , G. T. Zoëga, Clarendon Press, 1910, at Internet Archive .
Old Saxon
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *lēgaz ( “ low ” ) .
Adjective
lāg (comparative lāgiro , superlative lāgist )
low
Declension
Positive forms of lāg
Strong declension
gender
masculine
feminine
neuter
case
singular
plural
singular
plural
singular
plural
nominative
lāg
lāge , lāga
lāg
lāga
lāg
lāg , lāga
accusative
lāgan , lāgen
lāga , lāge
lāga
lāga
lāg
lāg , lāga
genitive
lāges , lāgas
lāgaro , lāgoro , lāgero
lāgara , lāgaro
lāgaro , lāgoro , lāgero
lāges , lāgas
lāgaro , lāgoro , lāgero
dative
lāgumu , lāgum , lāgun , lāgun , lāgon , lāgen , lāgan
lāgun , lāgon , lāgum
lāgaro , lāgaru , lāgara
lāgun , lāgon
lāgumu , lāgum , lāgun , lāgun , lāgon , lāgen , lāgan
lāgun , lāgon , lāgum
Weak declension
gender
masculine
feminine
neuter
case
singular
plural
singular
plural
singular
plural
nominative
lāgo , lāga
lāgon , lāgun
lāga , lāge
lāgon , lāgun , lāgan
lāga , lāge
lāgon , lāgun
accusative
lāgon , lāgan
lāgon , lāgun
lāgun , lāgon , lāgan
lāgon , lāgun , lāgan
lāga , lāge
lāgon , lāgun
genitive
lāgen , lāgan
lāgono , lāgeno
lāgun , lāgan , lāgen
lāgono
lāgen , lāgan
lāgono , lāgeno
dative
lāgon , lāgen , lāgan
lāgon , lāgun
lāgun , lāgan
lāgon , lāgun
lāgon , lāgen , lāgan
lāgon , lāgun
Comparative forms of lāg (weak only)
Weak declension
gender
masculine
feminine
neuter
case
singular
plural
singular
plural
singular
plural
nominative
lāgiro , lāgira
lāgiron , lāgirun
lāgira , lāgire
lāgiron , lāgirun , lāgiran
lāgira , lāgire
lāgiron , lāgirun
accusative
lāgiron , lāgiran
lāgiron , lāgirun
lāgirun , lāgiron , lāgiran
lāgiron , lāgirun , lāgiran
lāgira , lāgire
lāgiron , lāgirun
genitive
lāgiren , lāgiran
lāgirono , lāgireno
lāgirun , lāgiran , lāgiren
lāgirono
lāgiren , lāgiran
lāgirono , lāgireno
dative
lāgiron , lāgiren , lāgiran
lāgiron , lāgirun
lāgirun , lāgiran
lāgiron , lāgirun
lāgiron , lāgiren , lāgiran
lāgiron , lāgirun
Superlative forms of lāg
Strong declension
gender
masculine
feminine
neuter
case
singular
plural
singular
plural
singular
plural
nominative
lāgist
lāgiste , lāgista
lāgist
lāgista
lāgist
lāgist , lāgista
accusative
lāgistan , lāgisten
lāgista , lāgiste
lāgista
lāgista
lāgist
lāgist , lāgista
genitive
lāgistes , lāgistas
lāgistaro , lāgistoro , lāgistero
lāgistara , lāgistaro
lāgistaro , lāgistoro , lāgistero
lāgistes , lāgistas
lāgistaro , lāgistoro , lāgistero
dative
lāgistumu , lāgistum , lāgistun , lāgistun , lāgiston , lāgisten , lāgistan
lāgistun , lāgiston , lāgistum
lāgistaro , lāgistaru , lāgistara
lāgistun , lāgiston
lāgistumu , lāgistum , lāgistun , lāgistun , lāgiston , lāgisten , lāgistan
lāgistun , lāgiston , lāgistum
Weak declension
gender
masculine
feminine
neuter
case
singular
plural
singular
plural
singular
plural
nominative
lāgisto , lāgista
lāgiston , lāgistun
lāgista , lāgiste
lāgiston , lāgistun , lāgistan
lāgista , lāgiste
lāgiston , lāgistun
accusative
lāgiston , lāgistan
lāgiston , lāgistun
lāgistun , lāgiston , lāgistan
lāgiston , lāgistun , lāgistan
lāgista , lāgiste
lāgiston , lāgistun
genitive
lāgisten , lāgistan
lāgistono , lāgisteno
lāgistun , lāgistan , lāgisten
lāgistono
lāgisten , lāgistan
lāgistono , lāgisteno
dative
lāgiston , lāgisten , lāgistan
lāgiston , lāgistun
lāgistun , lāgistan
lāgiston , lāgistun
lāgiston , lāgisten , lāgistan
lāgiston , lāgistun
Polish
Etymology
Borrowed from English lag .
Pronunciation
Noun
lag m inan
( computing , slang ) lag ( bad connection, loss of connection )
Synonym: opóźnienie
Declension
Derived terms
Further reading
lag in Polish dictionaries at PWN
Romansch
Etymology
From Latin lacus , from Proto-Italic *lakus , from Proto-Indo-European *lókus ( “ lake, pool ” ) .
Noun
lag m (plural lags )
( Sursilvan, Sutsilvan ) lake
Scottish Gaelic
Etymology
From Old Irish lac ( “ weak ” ) .
Pronunciation
Adjective
lag
weak , feeble
Derived terms
References
^ Oftedal, M. (1956 ) A linguistic survey of the Gaelic dialects of Scotland, Vol. III: The Gaelic of Leurbost, Isle of Lewis , Oslo: Norsk Tidsskrift for Sprogvidenskap
Sumerian
Romanization
lag
Romanization of 𒋃 ( lag )
Swedish
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Old Swedish lagh , from Old Norse lǫg . Cognate with Danish lov , Norwegian lov , English law .
Related to Old Norse leggja “to define”.
Noun
lag c
a law ; a written or understood rule that concerns behaviours and the appropriate consequences thereof. Laws are usually associated with mores.
law; the body of written rules governing a society.
a law; a one-sided contract.
a law; an observed physical law.
( mathematics ) a law; a statement that is true under specified conditions.
Usage notes
Appears with a frozen genitive from when till governed the genitive in the expression vara någon till lags ( “ to please someone ” ) .
Declension
Derived terms
See also
Etymology 2
From Old Swedish lagher , from Old Norse lǫgr , from Proto-Germanic *laguz , from Proto-Indo-European *lókus .
Cognate with Latin lacus .
Noun
lag c
( cooking ) a water-based solution of sugar, salt and/or other spices; e.g. brine
Declension
Etymology 3
From Old Swedish lagh , from Old Norse lag . Derived from Old Norse leggja ( “ to lay ” ) or liggja ( “ to lie ” ) .
Noun
lag n
a workgroup , a team ; group of people which in sports compete together versus another team; or in general, work closely together
Declension
Derived terms
References
Anagrams
Tagakaulu Kalagan
Noun
lag
wild cat