Trigged


adjective, Chiefly British.
1.
neat, trim, smart, or spruce.
2.
in good physical condition; sound; well.
verb (used with object), trigged, trigging.
3.
Chiefly British Dialect. to make trim, smart, etc. (often followed by up or out).
verb (used with object), trigged, trigging. Dialect.
1.
to support or prop, as with a wedge.
2.
to act as a check on (the moving of wheels, vehicles, etc.).
noun
3.
a wedge or block used to prevent a wheel, cask, or the like, from rolling.
adjective
1.
neat or spruce
verb trigs, trigging, trigged
2.
to make or become trim or spruce
noun
1.
a wedge or prop
verb (transitive) trigs, trigging, trigged
2.
to block or stop
3.
to prop or support
trig
trigonometry

Read Also:

  • Trigger

    noun 1. a small projecting tongue in a firearm that, when pressed by the finger, actuates the mechanism that discharges the weapon. 2. a device, as a lever, the pulling or pressing of which releases a detent or spring. 3. anything, as an act or event, that serves as a stimulus and initiates or precipitates […]

  • Trigger area

    trigger area trig·ger area (trĭg’ər) n. A point or circumscribed area that when irritated or stimulated will give rise to physiological or pathological change elsewhere.

  • Triggered

    noun 1. a small projecting tongue in a firearm that, when pressed by the finger, actuates the mechanism that discharges the weapon. 2. a device, as a lever, the pulling or pressing of which releases a detent or spring. 3. anything, as an act or event, that serves as a stimulus and initiates or precipitates […]

  • Triggered activity

    triggered activity trig·gered activity (trĭg’ərd) n. One or a series of spontaneously generated heartbeats originating from an action potential that produces an after-depolarization that reaches activation threshold.

  • Trigger-finger

    noun 1. any finger, usually the forefinger, that presses the trigger of a gun. 2. either forefinger, depending on which hand is dominant. 3. Pathology. difficulty in straightening or bending a ring finger, caused by inflammation and thickening of its tendon.


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