Use of gag in Sentences. 29 Examples
The examples include gag at the start of sentence, gag at the end of sentence and gag in the middle of sentence
gag at the end of sentence
- The foul smell made her gag.
- The stench of rotting meat made him gag.
- The clown panicked the audience with a gag.
- Just the smell of liver cooking makes me gag.
- His blue eyes implored her to take off the gag.
- Cattelan's work is a see-once-then-forget-it gag.
- The price of these tickets is enough to make anyone gag.
- Two days dead, the body was beginning to putrefy and the stench made both Benjamin and myself gag.
- Some first-time eaters may become alarmed as this happens, thinking they have somehow become the victim of a time-lapse photography gag.
gag in the middle of sentence
- They tied him up and put a gag on him.
- The robbers rammed the gag in her mouth.
- It was a bit of a running gag in the show.
- There was this running gag about a penguin.
- Each gag was rewarded with a generous belly-laugh.
- The new laws are seen as an attempt to gag the press.
- The new censorship laws are an attempt to gag the press.
- His captors had put a gag of thick leather in his mouth.
- Her hands and feet were tied and a gag placed over her mouth.
- The gang tied up the security guard and put a gag in his mouth.
- A Republican abortion rights group calls it a virtual gag order.
- As soon as the cold water hit my sinuses, I started to gag and panic.
- In the midst of them, a gag tied tightly about her mouth, was a woman.
- There was this running gag about a penguin ( = they kept telling penguin jokes ).
- His scream was muffled by the gag; the sound was like a child shrieking inside a locked room.
- Or does he want to gag free speech and have every tabloid newspaper supporting the Tory party?
- The long rubber stomach tube, the wooden gag with its leather straps to buckle behind the horns.
- The judge in the case has clamped a gag order on all participants and seems very serious about it.
- Treat the gag programs and animated cards that tend to circulate around the festive season, with utmost caution.
- Like all the other newspaper publishers in the city, Harrison Gray Otis had been operating under a self-imposed gag rule.
Sentence Examples for Similar Words:
- curb
- , silence
- , retch
- , joke
- , funny
- , restrain
- , muzzle
- , restraint
- , suppress
- , block
- , curb
- , restriction
- , stifle
- , ban
- , witticism
- , muffle