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The Collaborative International Dictionary
fagot

fagot \fag"ot\ (f[a^]g"[u^]t) n. [F., prob. aug. of L. fax, facis, torch, perh. orig., a bundle of sticks; cf. Gr. fa`kelos bundle, fagot. Cf. Fagotto.]

  1. A bundle of sticks, twigs, or small branches of trees, used for fuel, for raising batteries, filling ditches, or other purposes in fortification; a fascine.
    --Shak.

  2. A bundle of pieces of wrought iron to be worked over into bars or other shapes by rolling or hammering at a welding heat; a pile.

  3. (Mus.) A bassoon. See Fagotto.

  4. A person hired to take the place of another at the muster of a company. [Eng.]
    --Addison.

  5. An old shriveled woman. [Slang, Eng.]

    Fagot iron, iron, in bars or masses, manufactured from fagots.

    Fagot vote, the vote of a person who has been constituted a voter by being made a landholder, for party purposes.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
fagot

early alternative spelling of faggot (n.1).

Wiktionary
fagot

alt. 1 (alternative form of faggot lang=en nodot=1) (qualifier: bundle of sticks) 2 (alternative form of faggot lang=en nodot=1) (qualifier: shrivelled old woman) 3 (alternative form of faggot lang=en nodot=1) (qualifier: a gay person, particularly a man) 4 A bundle of pieces of wrought iron to be worked over into bars or other shapes by rolling or hammering at a welding heat; a pile. 5 (context music obsolete English) A fagotto, or bassoon. 6 (context UK obsolete English) A person hired to take the place of another at the muster of a company. n. 1 (alternative form of faggot lang=en nodot=1) (qualifier: bundle of sticks) 2 (alternative form of faggot lang=en nodot=1) (qualifier: shrivelled old woman) 3 (alternative form of faggot lang=en nodot=1) (qualifier: a gay person, particularly a man) 4 A bundle of pieces of wrought iron to be worked over into bars or other shapes by rolling or hammering at a welding heat; a pile. 5 (context music obsolete English) A fagotto, or bassoon. 6 (context UK obsolete English) A person hired to take the place of another at the muster of a company. vb. (context transitive English) To make a fagot of; to bind together in a fagot or bundle.

WordNet
fagot
  1. n. offensive terms for an openly homosexual man [syn: faggot, fag, fairy, nance, pansy, queen, queer, poof, poove, pouf]

  2. a bundle of sticks and branches bound together [syn: faggot]

  3. v. ornament or join (fabric) by faggot stitch; "He fagotted the blouse for his wife" [syn: faggot]

  4. fasten together rods of iron in order to heat or weld them [syn: faggot]

  5. bind or tie up in or as if in a faggot; "faggot up the sticks" [syn: faggot, faggot up]

Wikipedia
Fagot

Fagot may refer to any of the following:

People
  • Jean-Noël Fagot (born 1958), French ice speed skater
  • Emilio Fagot (1883 – 1946), Puerto Rican politician
  • Jacques Sébastien François Léonce Marie Paul Fagot (1842 – 1908), French malacologist
  • Samuel Pierre Auguste Fagot (1797 – 1858), builder of the Uncle Sam Plantation
  • Véronique Fagot, 1977 Miss France
Other
  • Bassoon (Italian: fagotto, German: Fagott, Russian: фагот), musical instrument
  • 9K111 Fagot, Soviet SACLOS wire-guided anti-tank missile system
  • MiG-15 Fagot, Soviet turbojet fighter; see Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15
  • Fagot, or Koroviev, character in The Master and Margarita

Usage examples of "fagot".

When they reached the summit of the rocks of Saint-Sulpice Barbette set fire to the pile of fagots, and the boy helped her to pile on the green gorse, damp with hoarfrost, to make the smoke more dense.

Italian of an old harper whom I met in Cyprus, and not having had time either to translate it accurately or commit it to memory, I am fain to supply gaps in the music and the verse as I can upon the spur of the moment, as you see boors mend a quickset fence with a fagot.

Now to utter these impious words on the road to Sacche was mere waste of breath, seeing that he addressed them not to God, but to the Archbishop of Tours, who have once severely rebuked him, threatened him with suspension, and admonished him before the Chapter for having publicly told certain lazy people that a good harvest was not due to the grace of God, but to skilled labour and hard work--a doctrine which smelt of the fagot.

The fuel, made of well-prepared fagots, was laid on the ground and surrounded with several rows of dried bricks, which soon formed an enormous cube, to the exterior of which they contrived airholes.

Now, whether the Aleut had counted burning fagots, or kept tally some other way, the count was up.

And therewithall looking about for some cudgel, hee espied where lay a fagot of wood, and chusing out a crabbed truncheon of the biggest hee could finde, did never cease beating of mee poore wretch, until such time as by great noyse and rumbling, hee heard the doores of the house burst open, and the neighbours crying in most lamentable sort, which enforced him being stricken in feare, to fly his way.

The labourer has little else to do but to chop up disused hop-poles into long fagots with a hand-bill--in other counties a bill-hook.

Job caught rats and rabbits and moles, and bought fagots or potatoes, or fruit or rabbit-skins, or rusty iron: wonderful how he seemed to have command of money.

A few women trudged through camp with fagots or bundles of meager food.

The story had come down, that Ann Holyoake spoke these words in a prayer she offered up at the stake, after the fagots were kindled.

I assembled my officers, and gave them orders to prevent these women lighting fires with anything but fagots and brushwood.

He was writhing in the midst of a heap of fagots, tied to a stake, and the flames were licking him with their burning tongues.

On the platform were three stakes with fagots piled ready for lighting, while the executioner and his assistants stood impassively in front, watching as the procession drew up.

Hunt turned and pointed a finger at one of the three piles of fagots heaped around the stakesthe intended victims had made themselves scarce.

Sometimes there was an overthrown nest like a sack of twigs turned out on the turf, such as the hedgers rake together after fagoting.