Crossword clues for wigwag
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Wigwag \Wig"wag`\, v. i. [See Wag, v. t.] (Naut.) To signal by means of a flag waved from side to side according to a code adopted for the purpose. [Colloq.]
Wigwag \Wig"wag`\, v. t. & i. [imp. & p. p. Wigwagged; p. pr. & vb. n. Wigwagging.] To move to and fro, to wag.
Wigwag \Wig"wag`\, n. [See Wigwag, v. t. & i.] Act or art of wigwagging; a message wigwagged; -- chiefly attributive; as, the wigwag code. -- Wig"wag`er, n.
Wiktionary
n. Any of a number of mechanical or electrical devices which cause a component to oscillate between two states. vb. 1 to oscillate between two states. 2 to send a signal by waving a single flag.
WordNet
v. send a signal by waving a flag or a light according to a certain code
signal by or as if by a flag or light waved according to a code
[also: wigwagging, wigwagged]
Wikipedia
Wigwag is the nickname given to a type of railroad grade crossing signal once common in North America, named for the pendulum-like motion it used to signal the approach of a train. It is generally credited to Albert Hunt, a mechanical engineer at Southern California's Pacific Electric (PE) interurban streetcar railroad, who invented it in 1909 for safer railroad grade crossings. The term should not be confused with its usage in Britain, where wigwag is generally used to refer to alternate flashing lights, such as those found at modern level crossings.
Wigwag was an American magazine published from 1988 until 1991.
Founded by Alexander "Lex" Kaplen, who worked at The New Yorker, Wigwag eschewed celebrity coverage in favor of personal and literary writing. A test issue was put on newsstands in the summer of 1988, and the magazine formally debuted in October 1989. The magazine attracted writers such as Peter Matthiessen, Terry McMillan, Garry Wills, Alex Heard, Sousa Jamba and Nancy Franklin, but despite a circulation of 120,000, and despite being financially successful, ceased publication when the Gulf War broke out in 1991 and the economy entered a recession. It published its last issue in February 1991. In its brief lifetime it reached a circulation of close to 200,000 and became a brand name signifying family-feeling and an appreciation of the qualities of non-metropolitan America.
The legend of Wigwag's founding by a group of young exiles from The New Yorker – an exodus which followed The New Yorker's acquisition by Conde Nast and Conde Nast's subsequent dismissal of The New Yorker's longtime editor William Shawn – attracted an enormous amount of attention to its launch and early publication. Once launched, it quickly became a success d'estime, and critics often called it the "Anti-Spy" – in reference to the funny, cruel and cynical New York magazine of that name. Many saw the two magazines as rivals for media attention – neither survived the 1991 recession (although Spy lingered on in a brief afterlife). Contemporary observers thought that the "parent ship," The New Yorker itself, then edited by Robert Gottlieb, also saw itself as threatened by Wigwag during Wigwag's lifetime. Wigwag proposed a kind of counter-reality to the sophistication which magazines like The New Yorker and Spy aspired to – offering, instead of The New Yorker's famed "Talk of the Town" section, its own titled opening section, "Letters from Home."
Notable staffers at Wigwag include Nancy Holyoke, who went on (with the help of Harriet Brown, another Wigwag editor, now an associate professor at the S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications) to found American Girl magazine at Pleasant Company in Wisconsin, Caroline Fraser, the author of a noted history of the Christian Science Church, and Evan Cornog, now associate dean of the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. One of the most significant contributors to Wigwag's identity was its art director, the illustrator and designer Paul Davis. Many have observed that Wigwag's editorial and design innovations under Kaplen and Davis were later adopted by Tina Brown and implemented at The New Yorker when she became its editor.
Wigwag (wig wag, wig-wag) may refer to:
Usage examples of "wigwag".
Custis had made wigwag signal flags out of two bamboo poles and two halves of his shirt.
He was signaling slowly, carefully, after the fashion of a man who was not too familiar with the wigwag system.
So she bloated up and dragged that pig iron back up off the bottom and used her foot to wigwag the first boat to come along.
He gets called for everything from Boy Scout wigwag ideas to super-cyclotronic-electron-stream beams to contact the outer planets.
With his index finger McKechnie made a wigwag motion over the glasses.
The little cardboard sign with peez godz scrawled on it in conventional Roman lettering wigwagged desperately over the heads of the gawking mob surrounding the short, dumpy little man whose only clothing was a pleated linen kilt, red leather sandals, and a heavy black Cleopatra wig.
In about half an hour he came to the window and wigwagged over for my benefit.
Brak pulled his broadsword, wigwagged it high over his head and hallooed again.
I was waving my arms to little effect so I crawled out of the drift, wigwagging more furiously until he spotted me.
The bomber pilot was wigwagging the tail so the waist gunners could get a shot, but only the left waist gun was working.
A few energetic jumping jacks leaped straight up fifty feet or more, wigwagging with both hands.
Half a dozen grim-faced Project members were wigwagging their arms wildly at him.
Elizabeth thrashes about in his grasp, wildly wigwagging her lean delicate arms, then frantically kicking her long frail legs in the air as Paco, roaring with laughter, upends her.
They were not just running, they were gleefully leaping and bounding as they came, and pointing at the wagons and wigwagging at the elephant as though they were old acquaintances of hers.
Evers lifted his chin to frown curiously at Trace, the cigar wigwagging from his teeth.