It may be flown at half-staff
Publish date: 2024-06-04
| • | To hang loose without stiffness; to bend down, as flexible bodies; to be loose, yielding, limp. | 
| • | To droop; to grow spiritless; to lose vigor; to languish; as, the spirits flag; the streugth flags. | 
| • | To let droop; to suffer to fall, or let fall, into feebleness; as, to flag the wings. | 
| • | To enervate; to exhaust the vigor or elasticity of. | 
| • | That which flags or hangs down loosely. | 
| • | A cloth usually bearing a device or devices and used to indicate nationality, party, etc., or to give or ask information; -- commonly attached to a staff to be waved by the wind; a standard; a banner; an ensign; the colors; as, the national flag; a military or a naval flag. | 
| • | A group of feathers on the lower part of the legs of certain hawks, owls, etc. | 
| • | A group of elongated wing feathers in certain hawks. | 
| • | The bushy tail of a dog, as of a setter. | 
| • | To signal to with a flag; as, to flag a train. | 
| • | To convey, as a message, by means of flag signals; as, to flag an order to troops or vessels at a distance. | 
| • | An aquatic plant, with long, ensiform leaves, belonging to either of the genera Iris and Acorus. | 
| • | To furnish or deck out with flags. | 
| • | A flat stone used for paving. | 
| • | Any hard, evenly stratified sandstone, which splits into layers suitable for flagstones. | 
| • | To lay with flags of flat stones. | 
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