See also: wag and wäg

Translingual edit

Symbol edit

WAG

  1. (international standards) Indeterminately reserved ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 country code for Gambia.
    Synonym: GMB (for general use)

Usage notes edit

This is an indeterminately reserved code, included as part of ISO 3166-1 due to its use in designating road vehicles under the 1949 Geneva Convention on Road Traffic, and is not endorsed for general use by the ISO. The general-purpose code for the Gambia is GMB.

English edit

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

Back-formation from WAGs (wives and girlfriends).

Noun edit

WAG (plural WAGs)

  1. (informal) A wife or girlfriend of a sports star or other celebrity, originally and especially of an association football player.
    • 2006 July 2, Lucy Rock, The Observer, page 20:
      The World Cup WAGs are a good example of this. The younger girls, nicknamed the ‘hen-night crowd’ and led by Colleen McLoughlin, dance on tables and drink until the early hours while No. 1 WAG Victoria Beckham remains aloof, dining sedately with Ashley Cole’s fiancee, Cheryl Tweedy.
    • 2006 July 4, Emma Cowing, The Scotsman:
      In Wimbledon, the tennis WAGs and - just as excitingly - HABs (Husbands and Boyfriends) have been appearing courtside, enthusiastically cheering on their beloved other halves with a degree of style.
References edit
  • Tony Thorne (2014) “WAG”, in Dictionary of Contemporary Slang, 4th edition, London,  []: Bloomsbury

Etymology 2 edit

Acronym of wild-assed guess.

Noun edit

WAG (plural WAGs)

  1. (informal, business or military slang, US) A wild-assed guess; a rough estimate.

Anagrams edit