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Flag   /flæg/   Listen
Flag

noun
1.
Emblem usually consisting of a rectangular piece of cloth of distinctive design.
2.
A listing printed in all issues of a newspaper or magazine (usually on the editorial page) that gives the name of the publication and the names of the editorial staff, etc..  Synonym: masthead.
3.
Plants with sword-shaped leaves and erect stalks bearing bright-colored flowers composed of three petals and three drooping sepals.  Synonyms: fleur-de-lis, iris, sword lily.
4.
A rectangular piece of fabric used as a signalling device.  Synonym: signal flag.
5.
Flagpole used to mark the position of the hole on a golf green.  Synonym: pin.
6.
Stratified stone that splits into pieces suitable as paving stones.  Synonym: flagstone.
7.
A conspicuously marked or shaped tail.
verb
(past & past part. flagged; pres. part. flagging)
1.
Communicate or signal with a flag.
2.
Provide with a flag.
3.
Droop, sink, or settle from or as if from pressure or loss of tautness.  Synonyms: droop, sag, swag.
4.
Decorate with flags.
5.
Become less intense.  Synonyms: ease off, ease up, slacken off.



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"Flag" Quotes from Famous Books



... who, to judge by certain signs and peculiarities, had been imbibing something stronger than water. The captain and some of the officers went on shore, to call upon the governor. The governor's house was distinguished by a flag-staff, with the Spanish colours, or, rather, a remnant of the Spanish colours; and around the door stood a group of most indifferently clad Luzonian soldiers, turned out, we presumed, as a guard of honour. The governor was as much in dishabille as his troops, and shortly ...
— Borneo and the Indian Archipelago - with drawings of costume and scenery • Frank S. Marryat

... the battles of Five Forks and Dinwiddie Court-House, on April 1, 1865, Custer was brevetted brigadier-general in the regular army; and, as he had won the first colors taken by the Army of the Potomac in 1862, so, in 1865, he received the first flag of truce from Lee's army when the end at last came, and was present at the historic surrender at Appomattox. Then he secured his last promotion. He was brevetted major-general in the regular army ...
— Great Men and Famous Women. Vol. 6 of 8 • Various

... The palm, in the shorthand of their art, gradually becomes a symmetrical branched ornament with two pendent bosses; this is again confused with the Greek iris, (Homer's blue iris, and Pindar's water-flag,)—and the Florentines, in adopting Byzantine ornament, read it into their own Fleur-de-lys; but insert two poppyheads on each side of the entire ...
— Proserpina, Volume 1 - Studies Of Wayside Flowers • John Ruskin

... nothing of the spirit or the training of the soldier; before it closed several thousand colored men had entered the army and some had won distinction for gallantry. Less than forty years later, in the war of 1812, the black man again appeared to take his stand under the flag of independence. The War of Secession again witnessed the coming forth of the black soldier, this time in important numbers and performing heroic services on a grand scale, and under most discouraging circumstances, but with such success that he ...
— The Colored Regulars in the United States Army • T. G. Steward

... vase so fair As woman's body, Helen flusht and fair Leaned from the wall a fire-hued seraph's face And in one rapt long look gave and took Grace. Deep in her eyes he saw the light divine, Quick in him ran fierce joy of it like wine: Light unto light made answer, as a flag Answers when men tell tidings from one crag Unto another, and from peak to peak The good news flashes. Scarcely could he speak Measurable words, so high his wild thought whirled: "Bride, Goddess, Helen, O Wonder of the World, Shall I come for thee?" Her tender words came soft ...
— Helen Redeemed and Other Poems • Maurice Hewlett


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