n. In parts of Scotland, a thin or gentle rain, a thick fog or mist, or a heavy shower.To bedew; daggle.To rain gently; drizzle: as, it dags.To run thick.n. A dagger (which see).n. A pistol; a long, heavy pistol, with the handle only slightly curved, formerly in use. Also called, especially in Scotland, tack.n. [From the verb.] A stab or thrust with a dagger.To pierce or stab with a dagger.To cut into slips.To cut out a pattern on (the edge of a garment).To cut off the skirts of, as the fleece of sheep.n. A loose pendent end; a pointed strip or extremity.n. Specifically— A leather strap; a shoe-latchet, or the like.n. An ornamental pointed form, one of many into which the edge of a garment was cut, producing an effect something like a fringe: used especially in the second half of the fourteenth century. Also spelled dagge.n. A short tapering or pointed piece of metal like the point of a dagger, used to interlock timbers with each other, or to form the stabbing or piercing teeth on rolls for breaking coal.n. The first antler of a buck, which is slender, almost straight, and without branches, thus resembling a dagger or dag.