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Definition of wag verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

wag

verb
 
/wæɡ/
 
/wæɡ/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they wag
 
/wæɡ/
 
/wæɡ/
he / she / it wags
 
/wæɡz/
 
/wæɡz/
past simple wagged
 
/wæɡd/
 
/wæɡd/
past participle wagged
 
/wæɡd/
 
/wæɡd/
-ing form wagging
 
/ˈwæɡɪŋ/
 
/ˈwæɡɪŋ/
Idioms
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  1. [transitive, intransitive] wag (something) if a dog wags its tail, or its tail wags, its tail moves from side to side several times
    • The dog raced ahead, its tail wagging furiously.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • furiously
    • happily
    See full entry
  2. [transitive] wag something to shake your finger or your head from side to side or up and down, often because you do not approve of something
    • ‘Just remember what I said,’ she repeated, wagging her finger at him.
    • He wagged his head from side to side.
  3. [transitive] wag something (Australian English, New Zealand English) to stay away from school without permission
    • to wag school
  4. Word Originverb Middle English (as a verb): from the Germanic base of Old English wagian ‘to sway’.
Idioms
set tongues wagging | tongues are wagging
  1. (informal) to cause people to start talking/people are talking about somebody’s private affairs
    • His sudden resignation set tongues wagging.
    • This is a small island and tongues are beginning to wag.
the tail (is) wagging the dog
  1. used to describe a situation in which the most important aspect is being influenced and controlled by somebody/something that is not as important
See wag in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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