Crossword clues for sagger
sagger
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Wiktionary
n. 1 A box or casing of clay used to protect delicate ceramics during firing; a saggar 2 (context slang English) term for a young male who wears trousers very low on his hips, exposing underwear and/or his buttocks or lower abdominals.
Wikipedia
Sagger may mean:
- AT-3 Sagger (9M14 Malyutka), a Soviet anti-tank missile
- Sagger, a misspelling of saggar, a protective casing of fire clay in which delicate ceramic articles are fired
- A sagger is someone who wears his pants below the waist to reveal under garment. See sagging (fashion)
Usage examples of "sagger".
There was a pause and Sagger sprang forward, trying to catch Joe around the arms.
In some manner it leaked out among the boys that Joe was going to the wedding, and two days before the affair came off Jack Sagger learned of it.
As it happened the entire party under Jack Sagger walked toward the unfinished building and came to a halt directly under the scaffolding.
Presently one after another of the boys followed suit, leaving Jack Sagger to sneak home, a sadder if not a wiser lad.
What Frank said was true, and less than a week later they heard through another hotel boy that Jack Sagger had been arrested for stealing some lead pipe out of a vacant residence.
The armored BMPs traveling with them had loosed their Sagger missiles.
It rolled happily across the moist meadow as if no battle, no Sagger strike, had ever occurred.
Wasef should have been on the heights with his artillery and Sagger missiles.
This time, however, it is a more difficult matter to pack it into the saggers since it must neither touch the sides of the sagger nor come in contact with any other piece.
He had no idea how to operate the 73mm gun and Sagger antitank missile system anyway.
The forty rounds of 73mm cannon ammunition, two thousand rounds of machine-gun ammunition, and four Sagger missile reloads chain-detonated in rapid succession.
Its cannon and Sagger missile mounting were clearly outlined against the facade of the building.
This time, a Russian-built Sagger antitank missile flashed over them as they backed down the hill, paying out the thin wire that guided it.
He had to push a thick patch of crisscrossed Sagger wires off the turret to free the hatch.
N ow they had an open patch of armor where a Sagger could hit and penetrate.