Gagged in a Sentence
  • He gagged and coughed.
  • She gagged and clawed at his hands, struggling to take a breath.
  • She gagged as a cool morning breeze carried the scents to her.
  • Rissa alone gasped as the dying woman gagged and squirmed on the floor.
  • If Dean himself had been bound and gagged, it would have been the joke of the squad room for weeks to come.
  • John Luke Grasso, his name was so much bile on my tongue I gagged to keep it down.
  • Before I could, the door was kicked open I was grabbed about the neck in a strangle hold that gagged me and a knife jabbed upward under my chin!
  • We were content to allow him this small title of uniqueness knowing it was killing him to be so close to a scientific miracle with hands tied and mouth gagged against announcing his findings to the world.
  • European Liberalism, too, gagged and fettered under Metternich's "system," recognized in the Greeks the champions of its own cause; while even conservative statesmen, schooled in the memories of ancient Hellas, saw in the struggle a fight of civilization against barbarism.
  • Business is bound and gagged by red tape, increasingly unable to compete with international rivals.
  • In the midst of these ineffective councils the chief sits usually silent a kind of a gagged audience for village orators.
  • Janice gagged at the vile taste of the antibiotic pill.
  • She bent over, gagged and vomited between her legs on the carpet.