| CAGE | • cage n. An enclosure made of bars, normally to hold animals. • cage n. The passenger compartment of a lift. • cage n. (Field hockey or ice hockey, water polo) The goal. |
| BOCAGE | • bocage n. Alternative spelling of boscage. • BOCAGE n. (French) a decorative representation of trees, leaves, etc. |
| ENCAGE | • encage v. To lock inside a cage; to imprison. • ENCAGE v. to put in a cage, also INCAGE. |
| INCAGE | • incage v. Alternative form of encage. • INCAGE v. to put in a cage, also ENCAGE. |
| SOCAGE | • socage n. (Historical) In the Middle Ages (and chiefly but not exclusively medieval England), a legal system whereby… • SOCAGE n. a form of feudal land tenure, also SOCCAGE. |
| UNCAGE | • uncage v. To take out of or release from a cage. • uncage v. (By extension) To unleash; to remove from restraints. • UNCAGE v. to release from a cage. |
| BOSCAGE | • boscage n. A place set with trees or mass of shrubbery, a grove or thicket. • boscage n. (Law) Mast-nuts of forest trees, used as food for pigs, or any such sustenance as wood and trees yield to cattle. • boscage n. (Art) Among painters, a picture depicting a wooded scene. |
| BROCAGE | • brocage n. Obsolete form of brokerage. • BROCAGE n. the business of a broker. |
| DISCAGE | • discage v. (Transitive) To free from a cage. • DISCAGE v. to free from a cage. |
| RIBCAGE | • ribcage n. Alternative spelling of rib cage. • rib-cage n. Alternative spelling of ribcage. • rib␣cage n. (Anatomy) A part of the skeleton within the thoracic area consisting of ribs, sternum and thoracic vertebrae. |
| SOCCAGE | • soccage n. Alternative spelling of socage. • SOCCAGE n. a form of feudal land tenure, also SOCAGE. |
| TRUCAGE | • TRUCAGE n. (French) the faking of works of art, also TRUQUAGE. |
| BIRDCAGE | • birdcage n. (Countable) A cage to keep pet or zoological specimen birds in. • birdcage n. (Uncountable) A game of chance played with dice; chuck-a-luck. • bird-cage n. Alternative spelling of birdcage. |
| CARUCAGE | • carucage n. (Historical) A form of land taxation that replaced Danegeld in twelfth-century England. • carucage n. (Obsolete) The act of ploughing. • CARUCAGE n. a feudal tax levied on each carucate of land, i.e. as much land as may be tilled in a year and a day by one plough. |