judge advocate general. crying/shopping/talking etc jag a short period of time when you suddenly cry etc without controlling how much you do it (jag (16-19 centuries))
a bout of drinking or drug taking a flap along the edge of a garment; used in medieval clothing a slit in a garment that exposes material of a different color underneath; used in Renaissance clothing a sharp projection on an edge or surface; "he clutched a jag of the rock"
(Argo) 1. An insult. Likely coined specifically for the Geico commercial quoted in the following citation: Therapist: Maybe we should chug on over to mamby-pamby land where maybe we can find some confidence for you, you jackwagon. -- Geico commercial, 20102. A useless piece of equipment, usually military, used to refer to a mule-drawn freight wagon which had been pieced together from dicarded or substandard parts, and subject to frequent breakdowns. Jackwagons typically were good for only one or two uses, then abandoned or discarded along roadsides and in ditches, and were often re-cannibalized to create new jackwagons
1. A pedlar, a hawker. Also, a carrier, a carter. 2. Mining (now Hist.). A driver of packhorses, a person in charge of trains of trucks.3. A vessel taking supplies to deep-sea fishing boats and bringing back their catches. 4. A person who or thing which jags something
Something that is jagged has a rough, uneven shape or edge with lots of sharp points. jagged black cliffs A jagged scar runs through his lower lip. having a rough or pointed edge or surface (jag (14-18 centuries), perhaps from az-zagaye )
A computer enhanced human Jaggers are fitted with standard data-jacks, and a medium nanite level Visual enhancements add a blue tint to the Jagger's eyes when inactive, and become fully blue when active Jaggers have access to most levels of the datascape, but absolutely no Void access Their internal computer systems are limited, and they possess an innerscape, but no internal voidscape