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"wigging" Definitions
  1. a scolding or reproof.

31 Sentences With "wigging"

How to use wigging in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "wigging" and check conjugation/comparative form for "wigging". Mastering all the usages of "wigging" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Wigging out at the thought of anyone spending $200 on a casserole dish?
Like, this may actually help bring "groovy" and "wigging out" back into modern parlance.
Parker remembered the officers saying that Smith was "wigging out" on drugs, investigators said.
SAG-AFTRA Closes Wigging Probe, Says It Remains Committed To Ending Practice Of Men Doubling For Women
But Deven MacNair said her most risky move has been speaking out against wigging,  the age-old practice of stuntmen donning wigs and women&aposs clothes to double for actresses.
Lately, Earth's magnetic field has been wigging out, scooting toward Siberia at the north magnetic pole with such haste that scientists decided to update the map of these powerful forces.
If you are one of the millions of Americans planning the Super Bowl party of the century right now, you need to stop wigging out about wings and consider something else: your pet.
As we found out in last week's "Wigging Out," Bethenny is in the midst of a consistent panic attack over the fact that her restraining order against ex-husband Jason Hoppy is nearly up.
" Katie Rowe, president of the Stuntwomen's Association of Motion Pictures, says she surveyed a group of about 30 members of her organization about wigging and found that "most people have maybe seen it once.
Anyone who's been through the ritual of preparing for a festival has also likely had to take care of a friend who starts wigging out, whether from a bad trip or combining the wrong substances.
Whether you're wigging out like Cardi and Nicki Minaj, playing with temporary colors, or taking the full plunge, one thing's for sure: All eyes will be on you... and all your outfits will match, too.
The topics of the survey take in everything from pill testing, to the police; from nightclub closures to vaping; from weed to wigging out—so it really is worth heading over and having a look.
While we can depend on stars like Kim Kardashian, Demi Lovato, and Kelly Rowland to serve some damn good glam throughout the year, we still get a kick out of them wigging out and pushing the envelope even further with their costumes,.
When we last saw this tech tested out in early 2017, Amazon was reportedly still working on some bugs—like the computers that run the store wigging out if too many customers entered the building, or they moved too fast inside the building, or if retail items got moved around on the shelves.
The multigenerational trauma incurred by this oil-and-fast-food magnate's neglect is impressive: a first wife institutionalized after a bungled suicide attempt, a middle-aged son looping in place over his failed play for baseball glory, another son wigging out with paranoia and delusions, a drug-addicted ragamuffin daughter whose most dignified gig is working as a serving wench in a Las Vegas Tournament of Kings show.
Nikki Knewstub, "I expect wigging, says beaten Tyme", The Guardian, 29 September 1976, p. 7.
Gerhart was likely married to the daughter of a Count in Hamaland, as evidenced by the similarity of his second son's name Wigging, to Wigmann who was a contemporary count in Hamaland, and because the family was recorded giving gifts in Hamaland to various abbeys. Gerhart, his son Wigging, and other nobility from the region gave land and goods from several pagi of Friesland to the Abbey of Fulda.
Jaekel places Gerhart as son of Gerulf I of Frisia and father of Wigging. Gerhart likely held the title of Count of Friesland when his father was removed in 834 until 855 when Gerhart died. Shortly after Gerhart's death, his eldest son, Folkger, did not accept the title. Instead he donated some of his estates and entered Werden Abbey, leaving the remainder of his estates and the title of Count to Gerhart's second son, Wigging.
Stunt performer Deven MacNair filed an EEOC anti-discrimination lawsuit against producers of the film over an incident of "wigging", the practice of using a stunt performer that does not match either the sex or race of the actor, which is against SAG-AFTRA rules.
Crutching a sheep that has been wigged (eye-wooled). Freshly crutched and wigged Merino sheep. Crutching refers to the removal of wool from around the tail and between the rear legs of a sheep for hygiene purposes. It can also refer to removing wool from the heads of sheep (wigging or eye-wooling).
John Mulvey, writing for the same magazine, considered "Work It Out" to be the best tune Beyoncé had recorded since "Say My Name" (2000), and he further commented, "it's Beyoncé yowling, testifying and wigging out in only slightly-studied retro fashion that's most striking."John Mulvey. (July 12, 2002) Beyoncé : Work It Out. NME Retrieved on February 20, 2011.
In 1993, a federal judge ruled in Burgess's favor. "Wigging" refers to the practice of male stunt doubles taking the place of an actress, parallel to "paint downs", where white stunt doubles are made up to resemble black actors. Female stunt doubles have begun to protest this norm of "historical sexism", saying that it restricts their already limited job possibilities.
The work of stunt doubles in American TV and film productions is overwhelmingly taken by white men. When they are made up to look like a woman, the practice is called "wigging". When they are made up to look like another race, the practice is called a "paint down". Stunt performers Janeshia Adams-Ginyard and Sharon Schaffer have equated it in 2018 with blackface minstrelsy.
He became a colliery agent and ship broker.Debretts Guide to the House of Commons 1886 In 1885 Bright was elected Member of Parliament for Stoke-upon-Trent.Leigh Rayment He was in favour of Irish Home Rule and came into disagreement with his father on the matter and received a parental wigging. He is said to have left his father speechless by regretting in response that "two statesmen could not discuss politics without indulging in unnecessary personalities".
This will be more expensive and strenuous to fix. So for example, if a soft lime-based mortar was originally used, the most appropriate repointing mortar is likely to also contain a large amount of lime. Restoration (before and after) of a Georgian brick facade in Limerick, re-pointed in Irish Wigging, using hybrid lime mix mortar, after replacing damaged bricks with matching salvaged bricks An architectural conservator can perform a mortar analysis in order to make recommendations for replacement mortar that is both physically and aesthetically compatible with the building. There are two common methods of analyzing mortar.
Urine and watery faeces from eating spring grass can also lead to myiasis (fly-strike), which occurs when flies lay eggs in warm, damp wool and the fly larvae grow and eat into the sheep. Crutching is an effective way to help prevent this; in some areas, crutching is carried out at the start of the fly season (which depends on local climatic conditions) and may be needed at intervals of 6–8 weeks in high fly risk conditions. Rams and wethers may also be rung (crutched) on the belly around the pizzle (cock) to prevent fly- strike there. Wigging (removal of wool from the head of sheep) is carried out to prevent the sheep from becoming "wool blind", in which the wool covers the sheep's eyes.
David Schroeder writes: > The passage of time has created an almost unbridgeable gulf between > ourselves and Mozart's time, forcing us to misread his scatological letters > even more drastically than his other letters. Very simply, these letters > embarrass us, and we have tried to suppress them, trivialize them, or > explain them out of the epistolary canon with pathological excuses.Schroeder > (1999:133) For example, when Margaret Thatcher was apprised of Mozart's scatology during a visit to the theatre to see Peter Shaffer's play Amadeus, director Peter Hall relates: > She was not pleased. In her best headmistress style, she gave me a severe > wigging for putting on a play that depicted Mozart as a scatological imp > with a love of four-letter words.
In July 2007, the firm gained some unlooked-for publicity when its discussions with Mr Justice Peter Smith concerning the possibility that the judge might take up employment with Addleshaws became the subject of an appeal to the Court of Appeal. The judge was discontented at the breakdown of the employment negotiations but nonetheless refused to recuse himself from hearing a case in which an individual partner of the firm was engaged in the capacity of trustee. The Court of Appeal ruled that the judge could not hear the case.The High Court judge who may be in for much more than a severe wigging The Times, Frances Gibb, 18 July 2007 The judge subsequently received a formal reprimand from the Lord Chief Justice.
Mr Justice Peter Smith rounds on detractors following Addleshaws spat , The Lawyer By 13 July 2007, Joshua Rozenberg, a legal journalist, was suggesting in The Daily Telegraph that it was time for the judge to stand down."Mr Justice Peter Smith loses his judgment", The Daily Telegraph On 16 July 2007, it was announced in a press release from the Judicial Communications Office that the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers, had referred the judge's behaviour in the case to the independent Office for Judicial Complaints (OJC). Frances Gibb embarked on speculation as to whether the judge should stay in office in The Times on 18 July"The High Court judge who may be in for much more than a severe wigging", The Times and Rozenberg returned to the point on 19 July."Brief encounters", The Daily Telegraph Both journalists mentioned the question of the judge's health, but without going into detail.
According to singer Gruff Rhys the instrumentation was recorded "pretty much live" after which lyrics were written and the band's 10-minute jam session was "chopped ... up and made into a composed song" with the electronic section intact. Strings were later added by Sean O'Hagan. Rhys has stated that renting their own studio in Cardiff has given the band the ability to work on tracks such as "Slow Life" over a period of years—the group visit the studio almost every day and play: "the best parts on any of our records, I think, come out of a couple of us being in our little room in Cardiff at three in the morning, just wigging out and being ecstatic in the music." According to guitarist Huw Bunford the track had the working title "Miami Vice" as it featured a drum roll similar to one used in the theme tune to the 80's television show of the same name.
The tuckpointing method was developed in England in the late eighteenth century to imitate brickwork constructed using rubbed bricks (also rubbers and gauged bricks), which were bricks of fine, red finish that were made slightly oversized, and after firing, were individually abraded or cut, often by hand, to a precise size. When laid with white lime mortar, a neat finish of red brick contrasting with very fine white joints was obtained. Tuckpointing was a way of achieving a similar effect using cheap, unrubbed bricks; these were laid in a mortar of a matching colour (initially red, but later, blue-black bricks and mortar were occasionally used) and a fine fillet of white material, usually pipe clay or putty, pushed into the joints before the mortar set. Ministry of Defence (Defence Estates), Sutton Coldfield, England, accessed 2007-10-17 The term tuckpointing derives from an earlier, less sophisticated technique that was used with very uneven bricks: a thin line, called a tuck, was drawn in the flush-faced mortar, but left unfilled, to give the impression of well-formed brickwork. “Wigging”, an Irish technique similar in effect, reverses the order.

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