LAUGH vs GAG: NOUN
- A fun person.
- Something that provokes mirth or scorn.
- An expression of mirth particular to the human species; the sound heard in laughing; laughter.
- An expression of mirth peculiar to the human species; the sound heard in laughing; laughter. See laugh, v. i.
- Mirth or merriment, particularly at the expense of some person or thing; ridicule: used with the definite article: as, the laugh was turned against him.
- An expression of merriment by an explosive noise; an inarticulate expression of sudden mirth or joy.
- Fun; amusement.
- Something amusing, absurd, or contemptible; a joke.
- The sound of laughing; laughter.
- The act of laughing.
- A humorous anecdote or remark intended to provoke laughter
- The sound of laughing
- A facial expression characteristic of a person laughing
- A convulsion of the upper digestive tract.
- A joke or other mischievous prank.
- An order or rule forbidding discussion of a case or subject.
- A device to restrain speech, such as a rag in the mouth secured with tape or a rubber ball threaded onto a cord or strap.
- A loop on the throat latch guiding the gag rein.
- A rein for drawing the bit upward in the horse's mouth.
- A speech or phrase interpolated offhand by an actor on the stage in his part as written, usually consisting of some seasonable or local allusion.
- A mouthful that makes one retch; a choking bit.
- A common name of Mycteroperca microlepis, a large serranoid fish, attaining a length of two or three feet: found on the southern Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States.
- A joke, especially a practical joke; a farce; a hoax.
- An interpolation introduced by an actor into his part, whether in accordance with custom or with his own fancy.
- In coal-mining, a chip of wood in a sinking pit-bottom or sump.
- An apparatus or device for distending the jaws, such as is used in various surgical operations; hence, anything used to pry or keep open the jaws.
- A mouthful which produces nausea and retching, or threatens with choking.
- Something thrust into the mouth or throat to prevent speech or outcry; hence, any violent or authoritative suppression of freedom of speech.
- The act or an instance of gagging or choking.
- A comic effect or remark. : joke.
- A practical joke.
- A device placed in the mouth to keep it open, as in dentistry.
- An obstacle to or a censoring of free speech.
- Something forced into or put over the mouth to prevent speaking or crying out.
- A humorous anecdote or remark intended to provoke laughter
- Restraint put into a person's mouth to prevent speaking or shouting
LAUGH vs GAG: VERB
- Produce laughter
- To restrain someone's speech without using physical means.
- To restrain someone's speech by blocking his or her mouth.
- This sense?) (U.S. Army, slang) To smoke: to order a recruit to exercise until he "gags" (usually spoken in exaggeration).
- To experience the vomiting reflex.
- Be too tight; rub or press
- Tie a gag around someone's mouth in order to silence them
- Make jokes or quips
- Struggle for breath; have insufficient oxygen intake
- Cause to retch or choke
- Make an unsuccessful effort to vomit; strain to vomit
- Prevent from speaking out
LAUGH vs GAG: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To weep or cry; to feel regret, vexation, or disappointment after hilarity or exaltation.
- To laugh in spite of some restraining influence; to laugh aloud.
- To laugh secretly, or so as not to be observed, especially while apparently preserving a grave or serious demeanor toward the person or persons laughed at.
- To make an object of laughter or ridicule; to make fun of; to deride.
- Fig.: To be or appear gay, cheerful, pleasant, mirthful, lively, or brilliant; to sparkle; to sport.
- To show mirth, satisfaction, or derision, by peculiar movement of the muscles of the face, particularly of the mouth, causing a lighting up of the face and eyes, and usually accompanied by the emission of explosive or chuckling sounds from the chest and throat; to indulge in laughter.
- To say with a laugh.
- To affect or influence by laughter.
- To produce sounds resembling laughter.
- To feel a triumphant or exultant sense of well-being.
- To feel or express derision or contempt; mock.
- To show or feel amusement or good humor.
- To express certain emotions, especially mirth or delight, by a series of spontaneous, usually unarticulated sounds often accompanied by corresponding facial and bodily movements.
- To introduce gags or interpolations. See Gag, n., 3.
- To heave with nausea; to retch.
- To make jokes or quips.
- To experience a regurgitative spasm in the throat, as from revulsion to a food or smell or in reflexive response to an introduced object.
- To block off or obstruct (a pipe or valve, for example).
- To keep (the mouth) open by using a dental gag.
- To cause to choke, retch, or undergo a regurgitative spasm.
- To stop or restrain from exercising free speech.
- To prevent from speaking or crying out by using a gag.
LAUGH vs GAG: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To deride; to treat with mockery, contempt, and scorn; to despise.
- To cause one by laughter or ridicule to abandon or give up.
- To cause to be given up on account of ridicule; as, to laugh down a reform.
- To waste in hilarity.
- To express by, or utter with, laughter; -- with out.
- To affect or influence by means of laughter or ridicule.
- To pry or hold open by means of a gag.
- To stop the mouth of, by thrusting sometimes in, so as to hinder speaking; hence, to silence by authority or by violence; not to allow freedom of speech to.
LAUGH vs GAG: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To affect in some way by laughter, or a laughing manner; act upon by exercise of risibility: as, to laugh one's self sick or into convulsions; to laugh one out of countenance.
- To express laughingly; give out with jovial utterance or manner: as, he laughed his consent.
- To scoff playfully; make merry; flout; jeer: with at.
- To be or appear gay; appear cheerful, pleasant, lively, or brilliant.
- To express mirth or joy by an explosive inarticulate sound of the voice and a peculiar facial distortion; make a convulsive or chuckling noise excited by sudden merriment or pleasure.
- (idiom) (up/in) To rejoice or exult in secret, as at another's error or defeat.
- (idiom) (laugh out of the other side of (one's) mouth) To see one's good fortune turn to bad; suffer a humbling reversal.
- (idiom) (laugh all the way to the bank) To take glee in making money, especially from activity that others consider to be unimpressive or unlikely to turn a profit.
- Strain to vomit
- Have insufficient oxygen intake
- Struggle for breath
- Rub or press
- Be too tight
- To interpolate words of one's own into one's part: said of an actor.
- To retch; heave with nausea.
- Synonyms Gag, Muzzle, Muffle; stifle. To gag is to silence by thrusting something into the mouth and securing it in place. To muzzle a dog, or other creature having a projecting mouth, is to incase the mouth and nose (muzzle) in a framework called a muzzle, in order to prevent him from biting or eating. Both gag and muzzle are sometimes used figuratively for the act of silencing effectively by moral compulsion, gag implying also roughness or severity in the performance: as, a muzzled press; to gag a public speaker by threats of violence. To muffle is primarily to conceal by wrapping up, but the word has a secondary use to express the deadening of sound, by wrapping (as an oar) or otherwise (as a drum).
- To play jokes upon; joke; guy.
- To introduce interpolations into: as, to gag a part.
- To stop or choke up, as a valve or passage.
- To cause to heave with nausea.
- To pry or keep open by means of a gag.
- To stop up the mouth or throat of (a person) with some solid body, so as to prevent him from speaking; hence, to silence by authority or by violence; restrain from freedom of speech.
- (abbreviation) group specific antigens
LAUGH vs GAG: RELATED WORDS
- Grin, Smile, Chuckles, Funny, Giggle, Chuckle, Express joy, Express mirth, Wheeze, Yak, Gag, Jape, Jest, Laughter, Joke
- Joking, Prank, Funny, Fret, Heave, Yak, Suffocate, Wheeze, Choke, Jest, Laugh, Jape, Quip, Muzzle, Joke
LAUGH vs GAG: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Fun, Grin, Smile, Chuckles, Funny, Giggle, Chuckle, Express joy, Wheeze, Yak, Gag, Jape, Jest, Laughter, Joke
- Trick, Vomit, Puke, Joking, Funny, Heave, Yak, Wheeze, Choke, Jest, Laugh, Jape, Quip, Muzzle, Joke
LAUGH vs GAG: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- That made me laugh out loud certainly some instances that made me laugh loud.
- His fly was undone and he got a laugh and he took on acting based on the laugh.
- That will make you laugh and make others around you laugh as well.
- You had this incredibly special way you would laugh that would make anyone laugh.
- We are Frenchmen, we like to laugh, and we can laugh everywhere.
- Easter, and stand laugh laugh, then ford Citizens for Public Education, goes over the member list spin about in wondrous delight.
- Research has even found that men like women who laugh at their jokes and can make them laugh, too.
- Never goes away but I think it could work very well on an adult, lots of laugh, laugh!
- Javert began to laugh, with that mournful laugh which comes from profound conviction.
- We are to laugh the laugh of faith.
- High doses of either glucosamine or CS or the combination limited total GAG release, whereas intermediate doses enhanced GAG synthesis and total cartilage content.
- The objectives of the proposed rule are to provide continued protection to spawning aggregations for gag, male gag, and other species within the reserves.
- Exogenous GAG is also shown to stimulate cultured human trabecular meshwork cells to produce more GAG as a positive feedback mechanism.
- It is especially useful for patients who gag and can literally turn off the gag reflex for short periods of time.
- NSLs gag orders has proven woefully insufficient to address the First Amendment violations that result from NSL gag orders.
- Babies gag and cough frequently at a younger age because their gag relax is more forward in their mouth.
- FIC pathophysiology; decreased GAG excretion could contribute to increased bladder permeability if there is a GAG layer on top of the uroepithelial cells.
- The GAG binding element may comprise any protein, peptide or molecule that specifically or preferentially binds to GAG.
- GAG RULE: Whether physicians are subject to a gag rule, preventing criticism of the plan.
- If everyone is giving gag gifts then get a gag gift.
LAUGH vs GAG: QUESTIONS
- Does Laugh Factory Chicago offer Black Friday discounts?
- What episode does Takeshi laugh with Ichigo custome?
- Is it okay to laugh during inappropriate situations?
- What did old Monsieur farival laugh sardonically at?
- What Marvel character makes you laugh uncontrollably?
- Why does my partner laugh at me when I laugh at him?
- Is there a way to make my laugh sound like an actual laugh?
- What Fire Emblem character has a laugh similar to Legion's laugh?
- When did the song Laugh Laugh Laugh by the Beatles Come Out?
- What does the Clown from Laugh Laugh Laugh look like?
- What is a hypersensitive gag reflex in feeding specialists?
- When did the GAG line crossword puzzle last appear?
- What are some examples of random gag-worthy commercials?
- Should the gag reflex be a determinant of intubation?
- Did Travis Scott violate gag order at AstroWorld Festival?
- Does gag reflex protect against long-term swallowing issues?
- Was Fox&Friends''fake news'gag about Trump accurate?
- Can gag degradation-inhibitory lipoprotein (lab) improve colitis?
- Is the Beetlejuice gag in community worth watching?
- Are the corneal and gag reflex superficial reflexes?