0 → gauge
1 something valuable that is given to a person or organization that has lent you money and that they can keep if you fail to pay back the money
2 something valuable that is given to a person or organization that has lent you money, which they can keep if you fail to pay back the loan
He admits his objection does not apply to the case of existing mort- gages, and that if the case arise it would be a case of hardship.
We hurl at their feet, as our gage of battle, the head of a king.
He has the building society mort gage to carry, possibly for another nine or 10 years.
Clause 10, particularly, gives powers to prevent evasion by barter or by creating mort- gages and pledges for the purpose of evasion.
Out of 56,700 fishermen, curers, and others en- gaged in the fishing industry, 23,000 are engaged in the naval and military forces.
There is, then, no dispute there, and we cannot throw down the old battle gage of creating unemployment.
We are heavily mort- gaged to one of the weights which we are said to hold in the balance.
In the wires of the system, tension sensors using strain gages are installed.