gaggle

[ US /ˈɡæɡəɫ/ ]
[ UK /ɡˈæɡə‍l/ ]
VERB
  1. make a noise characteristic of a goose
    Cackling geese
NOUN
  1. a flock of geese
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How To Use gaggle In A Sentence

  • A gaggle of brawny bikers revs their choppers out front.
  • It was about 11: 05 this morning, while while we were asking questions of Mr. Fleischer -- as we always do in the morning -- what we call the gaggle -- Gordon Johndroe, who is an assistant who works for Mr. Fleischer, came in and handed him a Post-it note it, and on that note it said, We must evacuate this section of the West Wing. CNN Transcript Jul 12, 2001
  • There's an edgy, youthful feel to the sprawling stone downtown, where gaggles of short-haired, punky students walk narrow, walled streets.
  • That was understandable; it was in a military court at the Royal Air Force base in Uxbridge, Middlesex, in an airless room with a judge sitting at a table at one end of the room, and a gaggle of journalists sitting at the other.
  • A gaggle of schoolgirls followed the tennis star to his car.
  • A gaggle of journalists sit in a hotel foyer waiting impatiently.
  • A gaggle of cowboys walk by en route to the rodeo tent, lariats swinging.
  • They were being subversive and celebratory at the same time and there was also something rawly sexual about this gaggle of half-drowned young people cavorting and hugging and splashing in the mud.
  • At Edinburgh, a gaggle of squaddies boarded the train.
  • As if to mock her, at the end of the hall, the princeling in question was heading toward her, with his gaggle of priests in tow. TREASON KEEP
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