Gaggle

Gaggle

A gaggle is a term of venery for a flock of geese that isn't in flight; in flight, the group can be called a skein.

In terms of geese, a gaggle is equal to at least five geese.

In terms of salt, a gaggle is equal to eight fifty pound bags of salt. Usually one layer on a skid.

In military slang, a gaggle is an unorganized group doing nothing. In aviation, it is a large, loosely organized tactical formation of aircraft.

In the field of systems biology, The Gaggle is an open source software framework for exchanging data between independently developed software tools and databases to enable interactive exploration of data.[1]

Press gaggle

A "press gaggle" (as distinct from a press conference or press briefing) is the nickname given to an informal briefing by the White House Press Secretary which (as used by press secretaries for the George W. Bush administration) is on the record, but disallows videography. The term can also be used to refer to the informal interactions between the press and the press secretary that occur before a videotaped press briefing.[2]

One former member of the White House Press Corps provided the following historical context:[3]

"Gaggles" historically refer to informal briefings the press secretary conducts with the press pool rather than the entire press corps....they were more or less off the record, and their purpose was mostly to exchange information - the president's schedule and briefing schedule, from the administration side; heads-up on likely topics or early comment on pressing issues, from the news side....When the President traveled, sometimes the press secretary would hold a gaggle with the press pool that travels on Air Force One - not every time, but sometimes, and always informally.
In contrast, Ari [i.e. Ari Fleischer] does a gaggle on the plane every time the President goes out of town, and a transcript is made available for press corps members who weren't on the plane. These mid-air mini-briefings are the "gaggles" you can find transcripts of on the White House website.

The nickname is thought[who?] to stem from the idea that these more freewheeling press sessions, where the talk is much more rapid and free-form, are like a "gaggle of geese" honking. For example, the blog maintained by Newsweek magazine's political reporters is called The Gaggle; on their main page, their definition for "gaggle" when used to refer to the Washington, D.C. press, is "a flock of reporters pecking at a politician."[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Gaggle
  2. ^ 'Gaggle' roosting at HBO - Entertainment News, TV News, Media - Variety
  3. ^ The Washington Monthly
  4. ^ http://www.talk.newsweek.com/politics/

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Gaggle — Gag gle, n. [Cf. {Gaggle} v. i.] 1. (Zo[ o]l.) A flock of wild geese, especially when on the ground. [Prov. Eng.] Halliwell. [1913 Webster] 2. Hence: A gathering of people, especially a noisy one. [PJC] 3. Hence: Any clustered group of related… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • gaggle — (n.) late 15c., gagyll, with reference to both geese and women. Barnhart says possibly from O.N. gagl small goose, gosling, bird; OED calls it one of the many artificial terms invented in the 15th c. as distinctive collectives referring to… …   Etymology dictionary

  • Gaggle — Gag gle (g[a^]g g l), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Gaggled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Gaggling}.] [Of imitative origin; cf. D. gaggelen, gagelen, G. gackeln, gackern, MHG. g[=a]gen, E. giggle, cackle.] To make a noise like a goose; to cackle. Bacon. [1913… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • gaggle — ► NOUN 1) a flock of geese. 2) informal a disorderly group of people. ORIGIN imitative of the noise that a goose makes …   English terms dictionary

  • gaggle — [gag′əl] n. [ME gagel < gagelen, to cackle: orig. echoic] 1. a flock of geese 2. any group or cluster …   English World dictionary

  • gaggle — gag|gle [ˈgægəl] n [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: gaggle to make the sound of geese, to talk noisily (14 19 centuries), from the sound] 1.) a gaggle of tourists/children etc a noisy group of people ▪ a gaggle of teenage girls 2.) a gaggle of geese a… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • gaggle — UK [ˈɡæɡ(ə)l] / US noun [countable] Word forms gaggle : singular gaggle plural gaggles 1) informal a group of people, especially a noisy and uncontrolled group a gaggle of children in the park 2) a group of geese a noisy gaggle of geese …   English dictionary

  • gaggle — noun 1 a gaggle of tourists/children etc a noisy group of people: a gaggle of teenage girls 2 a gaggle of geese a number of geese (goose1 (1)) together …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • gaggle — noun Etymology: Middle English gagyll, from gagelen to cackle Date: 15th century 1. flock; especially a flock of geese when not in flight compare skein 2. a group, aggregation, or cluster lacking organization < a gaggle of reporters and… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • gaggle — gag|gle [ gægl ] noun count 1. ) a group of GEESE: a noisy gaggle of geese 2. ) INFORMAL a group of people, especially a noisy and uncontrolled group: a gaggle of children in the park …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

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