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cage
1[keyj]
noun
a boxlike enclosure having wires, bars, or the like, for confining and displaying birds or animals.
anything that confines or imprisons; prison.
something resembling a cage in structure, as for a cashier or bank teller.
the car or enclosed platform of an elevator.
Mining., an enclosed platform for raising and lowering people and cars in a mine shaft.
any skeleton framework.
Baseball., a movable backstop for use mainly in batting practice.
a frame with a net attached to it, forming the goal in ice hockey and field hockey.
Basketball: Older Use., the basket.
a loose, sheer or lacy overdress worn with a slip or a close-fitting dress.
Ordnance., a steel framework for supporting guns.
Machinery., retainer.
verb (used with object)
to put or confine in or as if in a cage.
Sports., to shoot (as a puck) into a cage so as to score a goal.
Cage
2[keyj]
noun
John, 1912–1992, U.S. composer.
cage
1/ keɪdʒ /
noun
an enclosure, usually made with bars or wire, for keeping birds, monkeys, mice, etc
( as modifier )
cagebird
a thing or place that confines or imprisons
something resembling a cage in function or structure
the rib cage
the enclosed platform of a lift, esp as used in a mine
engineering a skeleton ring device that ensures that the correct amount of space is maintained between the individual rollers or balls in a rolling bearing
informal, the basket used in basketball
informal, the goal in ice hockey
a steel framework on which guns are supported
informal, to upset or anger someone
verb
(tr) to confine in or as in a cage
Cage
2/ keɪdʒ /
noun
John. 1912–92, US composer of experimental music for a variety of conventional, modified, or invented instruments. He evolved a type of music apparently undetermined by the composer, such as in Imaginary Landscape (1951) for 12 radio sets. Other works include Reunion (1968), Apartment Building 1776 (1976), and Europeras 3 and 4 (1990)
Other Word Forms
- cageless adjective
- cagelike adjective
- recage verb (used with object)
Word History and Origins
Origin of cage1
Word History and Origins
Origin of cage1
Example Sentences
When it looked like he’d get one last at-bat in the eighth, Schwarber yelled out a question while hitting in the underground batting cage adjacent to the dugout.
"One of the players said 'I'd rather be in a cage full of lions than have a shower next to a gay man.'"
Eze grew up playing cage football around Greenwich with his two brothers - who are both footballers now.
He muscled it into the cage elevator, leashes in hand, the machine balanced against his hip like a prize wrested from fate.
Both try to find time to hit the batting cages to stay sharp during football season.
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