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Cage

[ US /ˈkeɪdʒ/ ]
[ UK /kˈe‍ɪd‍ʒ/ ]
NOUN
  1. United States composer of avant-garde music (1912-1992)

How To Use Cage In A Sentence

  • Some game bird breeders even debeak the birds or attach "peepers" or googles to their eyes to keep them attacking each other in the packed pens. (see: caged hen egg operations.) Is your state breeding birds for Dick Cheney style hunting like Illinois?
  • One day a young man caught a young tiger, and he kept it in an iron cage.
  • Inside the cages, the prisoners remain manacled.
  • Thousands died on the seas while they were being shipped like caged cattle between continents.
  • The foreign birds, most of these parrots and cockatoos, unfortunately need to be kept in cages.
  • That I did not drop it into a cageful of terrier-pups was wholly due to the native vigour with which _Striatus_ hung on. Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 158, 1920-02-04
  • And the more people who go see them, the more "bankable" Nicolas Cage becomes in the eyes of Hollywood producers, which in turn allows Nicolas Cage to make more movies.
  • The man was never as much of a sucker for a hook as Elton John was, but throughout 'The Soul Cages', Sting defiantly resists hummability as if a mere catchy pop chorus were too frivolous for such weighty content. The Soul Cages
  • He had been assigned to stand guard beside one of the caged men as they drove in a column through a baying mob. Times, Sunday Times
  • It felt like a gilded cage. Consuelo & Alva: Love and Power in the Gilded Age
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