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ToraToraTora | 15:28 Mon 10th Oct 2022 | News
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https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/uk-scotland-63157381
....Apparently all Scots are encouraged to get a "Booster" Jag. Not familiar with the model myself but I do encourage Jag ownership.
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What's wrong with us getting jags? ☺
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Nothing at all wolf, hence the phrase: "I do encourage Jag ownership. "
it sounds more appropriate than jab.

I'm getting my booster and flu jag in about four weeks.

☺☻
"An independent Scotland 'has what it takes' "

Quite so. It's just a question of who it takes it from.
‘Jab’, I guess is a jab from a needle so it makes sense - but ‘jag’? What does that actually mean?
Is Queen Nicola giving out even more of our English and Welsh hard-earned money?
Jag,meaning the same as Jab, is in Collins dictionary, and probably a few others. It's in very common usage in Scotland.
I know it’s in common use in Scotland but the word makes no sense.
Agree Naomi. I had my JAB on Friday and suffered all day yesterday, but better now.
There's a bar in Belfast called The Jeggy Nettle.
Jeg, Jeggy, are used both in Scotland and N Ireland.
Jag and jaggy have long been used in Scotland to describe anything sharp such as a holly bush...a needle.
Strange that the desire to change the way the Scottish and Irish speak and the words we use is still with us.
credit where it is due
Boris admits he completely tanked the economy
OK well what he said was......
Who wants to change the words you use, gness?
Looking at different dictionaries jag makes much more sense than jab.
Oh come on, Naomi. You must know what happened to our language and those who spoke it.
You've just said that the word I grew up using and those who still use it makes no sense.
It doesn’t make sense to me, gness, which is why I asked - but it’s a bit of a leap to suggest I’m trying to stop you using it.
Not all of the people in the UK speak with the accent of the posh south east.
How very observant, sandyRoe. I’d never noticed.
According to Chambers the derivation of jab is from the Scottish variant of job, meaning a thrust etc.

Do those who are scoffing at jag get jabbed for example by the thorns on a rose bush?
God! Why so touchy! No one is scoffing and no one is trying to change the way anyone speaks. I asked a question because I was interested to know why the word is used.

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