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  1. Dictionary
    scrag
    /skraɡ/

    verb

    • 1. handle roughly; beat up: informal British "my brothers were hoping he'd put a foot wrong so they could scrag him"
    • 2. kill by strangling or hanging: archaic US "many an honester man than her has been scragged"

    noun

    • 1. an unattractively thin person or animal: "his companion was a thin scrag of a man"
    • 2. a person's neck. archaic, informal

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. noun. ˈskrag. Synonyms of scrag. 1. : a rawboned or scrawny person or animal. 2. a. : the lean end of a neck of mutton or veal. called also scrag end.

  3. 1. a thin or scrawny person or animal. 2. the lean end of a neck of veal or mutton. 3. informal. the neck of a human being. verb Word forms: scrags, scragging, scragged (transitive) 4. informal. to wring the neck of; throttle.

  4. 5 days ago · scrag (third-person singular simple present scrags, present participle scragging, simple past and past participle scragged) (obsolete, colloquial) To hang on a gallows, or to choke, garotte, or strangle. Adrian thought it worth while trying out his new slang. To harass; to manhandle.

  5. a person who is unusually thin and scrawny. synonyms: skin and bones, thin person. see more. noun. lean end of the neck. see more. noun. the lean end of a neck of veal. synonyms: scrag end.

  6. Scrag definition: a lean or scrawny person or animal.. See examples of SCRAG used in a sentence.

  7. 1. A bony or scrawny person or animal. 2. A piece of lean or bony meat, especially a neck of mutton. 3. Slang The human neck. tr.v. scragged, scrag·ging, scrags Slang. To wring the neck of; strangle. [Perhaps from dialectal crag, neck, from Middle English cragge, from Middle Dutch crāghe, throat.]

  8. 1. a thin or scrawny person or animal. [...] 2. the lean end of a neck of veal or mutton. [...] 3. informal. the neck of a human being. [...] 4. informal. to wring the neck of; throttle. [...] More. Conjugations of 'scrag' present simple: I scrag, you scrag [...] past simple: I scragged, you scragged [...] past participle: scragged. More.

  9. Origin of Scrag. Perhaps related to Norwegian skragg (a lean person), dialectical Swedish skragge (old and torn thing), Danish skrog (hull, carcass); perhaps related to shrink. From Wiktionary.

  10. Scrag definition: . See examples of SCRAG used in a sentence.

  11. scrag /skræɡ/ n. a thin or scrawny person or animal. the lean end of a neck of veal or mutton. informal the neck of a human being. vb (scrags, scragging, scragged ) (transitive) informal to wring the neck of; throttle.