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That situation pretty much did encourage pizza sales. MmmmâŠ. pizza! But if they do it daily for months, someone has to get up, most days. They are at least 2 years from Michaelâs being able to realisitically take a day or 2 a week to make a reasonably healthy dinner.
Obviously, youâre on a mission. Hope you succeed. I have never encountered the word âbaggedâ in that way before.I have heard the word âbushedâ in that way before, and I understood what it meant.Maybe you can research that and let us know what you find.
During the few times I worked as my husbandâs dental assistant, I was fortunate to have two wonderful parents in law, living a mere 5 minute walk away (from both the clinic and the house). Ruth and Tomâs home was set up for children and the care was constant as we moved the kids from one house to the other. At the end of the day, we might stay at âRuthâsâ for dinner or weâd pick up the kids and come home â exhausted. Either way, it was âmomâ who put on the grub!
I am looking for a definition of âbaggedâ that means âexhausted or beatâ and I am failing:-ââ-It could simply be regional.But why bother looking it up at all?Like most words, we can tell what it means by itâs usage (otherwise, it wouldnât be in the strip).
NightShade09: Or just contact A Way With Words (1-800-WAY-WORD). A great radio show for those who like language..Or it might come from âfaggedâ, to be burned up like a cigarette, changed when fag got another definition.
I donât have an immediate reference for you, but itâs Brit. I have heard Canadians, Brits and Aussies use it. They usually say âKnackeredâ though. Derives from âIn the bag.â, I think.
You know, there is this search engine on the internet called Google, you may have heard of it, that I quite often use to answer such questions (click the link to answer yours).
I think youâre wrong, Michael; they arenât trying to decide anything. It is a negotiating session, or more likely, a game of one-upsmanship. Mom and Dad are trying to come up with the best way to say, âIâm too tired to even think about dinner,â so that the other will cave and do something â anything â whether itâs pizza, pb&j, or an actual (unlikely) home-cooked meal. We keep frozen pizzas on hand for these situations, and the kids are old enough to handle the task with verbal supervision â but someone still needs to give the authorization. (Which itself is a caving in to oneâs own weariness.)
JPuzzleWhiz: Right. The old WW-I song, Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag, is not quite extinct, and uses âWhile youâve a lucifer [match] to light your fagâ in the lyrics..There is also the possibility that âbagged outâ came from âfagged outâ in which âfagâ was a shortened form of fatigued. There is a convergent evolution in language in which a term can have more than one etymology, just as in nature, a shark (selachian), tuna (fish), ichthyosaur (reptile), and porpoise (mammal) all have the same basic shape because it is the most efficient for that environment.
Templo S.U.D. about 10 years ago
Um⊠why not Anne or Connie?
Argythree about 10 years ago
I guess they canât order a pizza (?)
lightenup Premium Member about 10 years ago
Sandwiches are quick and easy.
masnadies about 10 years ago
That situation pretty much did encourage pizza sales. MmmmâŠ. pizza! But if they do it daily for months, someone has to get up, most days. They are at least 2 years from Michaelâs being able to realisitically take a day or 2 a week to make a reasonably healthy dinner.
LV1951 about 10 years ago
Michael can fix bowls of cereal for Elizabeth and himself. Maybe for Mom & Dad too! Thatâll work!
Izzyrider about 10 years ago
Thatâs us, we usually end up making omlets, as weâre too pooped to go out.
BarBaraPrz about 10 years ago
Yes
goweeder about 10 years ago
Obviously, youâre on a mission. Hope you succeed. I have never encountered the word âbaggedâ in that way before.I have heard the word âbushedâ in that way before, and I understood what it meant.Maybe you can research that and let us know what you find.
JanLC about 10 years ago
Probably local slang.
There are a lot of words in common usage that donât exactly fit the dictionary definitions.
JanLC about 10 years ago
Lynnâs Notes:
During the few times I worked as my husbandâs dental assistant, I was fortunate to have two wonderful parents in law, living a mere 5 minute walk away (from both the clinic and the house). Ruth and Tomâs home was set up for children and the care was constant as we moved the kids from one house to the other. At the end of the day, we might stay at âRuthâsâ for dinner or weâd pick up the kids and come home â exhausted. Either way, it was âmomâ who put on the grub!
Can't Sleep about 10 years ago
I am looking for a definition of âbaggedâ that means âexhausted or beatâ and I am failing:-ââ-It could simply be regional.But why bother looking it up at all?Like most words, we can tell what it means by itâs usage (otherwise, it wouldnât be in the strip).
hippogriff about 10 years ago
NightShade09: Or just contact A Way With Words (1-800-WAY-WORD). A great radio show for those who like language.
hippogriff about 10 years ago
NightShade09: Or just contact A Way With Words (1-800-WAY-WORD). A great radio show for those who like language..Or it might come from âfaggedâ, to be burned up like a cigarette, changed when fag got another definition.
Fenshaw about 10 years ago
I donât have an immediate reference for you, but itâs Brit. I have heard Canadians, Brits and Aussies use it. They usually say âKnackeredâ though. Derives from âIn the bag.â, I think.
mabrndt Premium Member about 10 years ago
You know, there is this search engine on the internet called Google, you may have heard of it, that I quite often use to answer such questions (click the link to answer yours).
jimgamer about 10 years ago
Just flip a coin !!!!!! 8^)
Gretchen's Mom about 10 years ago
Â
I found the following for you on Dictionary.com:
 Â
Under: Slang definitions & phrases for bag(ged):
Â
adjective:1. Drunk (1950âs+)2. Prearranged; fixed 3. Exhausted; beat, pooped: Iâm too bagged to breathe.
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(As for #3âs example: I swear . . . thatâs exactly what it says!)
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poodles27 about 10 years ago
Break out the PB&J guys, those two wonât back down!
dsom8 about 10 years ago
I think youâre wrong, Michael; they arenât trying to decide anything. It is a negotiating session, or more likely, a game of one-upsmanship. Mom and Dad are trying to come up with the best way to say, âIâm too tired to even think about dinner,â so that the other will cave and do something â anything â whether itâs pizza, pb&j, or an actual (unlikely) home-cooked meal. We keep frozen pizzas on hand for these situations, and the kids are old enough to handle the task with verbal supervision â but someone still needs to give the authorization. (Which itself is a caving in to oneâs own weariness.)
hippogriff about 10 years ago
JPuzzleWhiz: Right. The old WW-I song, Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag, is not quite extinct, and uses âWhile youâve a lucifer [match] to light your fagâ in the lyrics..There is also the possibility that âbagged outâ came from âfagged outâ in which âfagâ was a shortened form of fatigued. There is a convergent evolution in language in which a term can have more than one etymology, just as in nature, a shark (selachian), tuna (fish), ichthyosaur (reptile), and porpoise (mammal) all have the same basic shape because it is the most efficient for that environment.