: to assemble (mechanical or electronic parts) so that they may be operated simultaneously as a group
Potentiometers are often ganged together so that the resistance in several circuits can be changed simultaneously. Richard Fowler
b
: to arrange or produce (something, such as pages of typeset material) together as a unit
… ganged the printing of 2000 cards to achieve a cost-efficient price per card of 38 cents. Vilma Barr
—often used with up
Where decals are large they may be printed singly; where small, more than one may be ganged up on one screen to save effort and to produce more copies in one impression. Albert Kosloff
Noun a gang of drug dealers He is in a gang. He was shot by a member of a rival gang. the gang at the office
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
Hernandez then issued a gang challenge and shot at the car. City News Service, San Diego Union-Tribune, 9 Sep. 2022 Portland’s gang enforcement team, which had been renamed to focus on gun violence broadly rather than just gangs, was disbanded by the Portland City Council in 2020.oregonlive, 8 Sep. 2022 But more than one shooting started with an argument at the club, including one tied to the YSL gang case. George Chidi, Rolling Stone, 8 Sep. 2022 Tornado Cash had become a preferred tool of the Lazarus Group, a hacking gang that carries out digital heists to help fund the North Korean regime and its weapons program, according to investigators. Tory Newmyer, Washington Post, 8 Sep. 2022 For gang outreach workers, wrestling with psychological scars is now part of the battle. Brittny Mejia, Los Angeles Times, 7 Sep. 2022 Woodfin this weekend called for a gang truce and identified some gangs by name, including H2K or Hard to Kill, which has been linked to multiple Jefferson County homicides. Carol Robinson | Crobinson@al.com, al, 6 Sep. 2022 Being put into Mexican prisons, which are overcrowded, underfunded and controlled by gangs, can be hell for those on pretrial detention, who often enter with no prison smarts or gang connections. Mark Stevenson, ajc, 4 Sep. 2022 Jerry Billups: intervention and diversion specialist with Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court, whose prior jobs included gang outreach and prevention in Slavic Village. Courtney Astolfi, cleveland, 1 Sep. 2022
Verb
Barbaro, who has modeled phenomena ranging from fish migrations to gang territorial disputes, says the Pamplona data could help calibrate models for stressed crowds to aid architectural design and evacuation planning. Jack Tamisiea, Scientific American, 23 Feb. 2022 Above all, the event serves as a venue for face-to-face connections among collectors – a place to gang together for wrist shots – that will be extra intense this year due to pent up desire after missing a year because of Covid. Carol Besler, Forbes, 21 Oct. 2021 For Nirbhaya's mother, justice is death for the men who gang raped her daughter. Vedika Sud, CNN, 19 Mar. 2020 Jang features in the names of many quintessential Korean ingredients, such as ganging (soy sauce), gochujang (chili paste) and doenjang (soybean paste). Katie Workman, NBC News, 8 Mar. 2020 And yet the oscillators responded differently to identical conditions, some ganging together while the rest went their own way, as if not coupled to anything at all. Natalie Wolchover, WIRED, 7 Apr. 2019 And yet the oscillators responded differently to identical conditions, some ganging together while the rest went their own way, as if not coupled to anything at all. Natalie Wolchover, WIRED, 7 Apr. 2019 And yet the oscillators responded differently to identical conditions, some ganging together while the rest went their own way, as if not coupled to anything at all. Natalie Wolchover, WIRED, 7 Apr. 2019 And yet the oscillators responded differently to identical conditions, some ganging together while the rest went their own way, as if not coupled to anything at all. Natalie Wolchover, WIRED, 7 Apr. 2019 See More
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English, "going, journey, road, path, privy, group of items forming a set," going back to Old English, "going, walking, journey, course, path, privy," going back to Germanic *ganga- (whence Old Saxon gang "walk, course," Old High German "walk, journey, passage," Old Norse gangr "going, course," Gothic gagg "way"), noun derivative from the base of *gangan- "to go" — more at gang entry 3
Note: The meaning "set of articles" apparently first appeared in Middle English, the now predominant meaning "group of persons" in early Modern English (hypothesized instances of this sense in Middle and Old English are dubious). A direct descendant of Old English gang in Modern English would be gong (with the effects of vowel lengthening before the cluster -ŋg- and subsequent rounding of the long vowel in monosyllables), but this survived into Modern English only in the sense "privy"—the now general form gang for other senses was borrowed into standard English from northern dialects and Scots, where rounding never occurred. Use of both the noun and verb gang in its historical senses, denoting motion or passage, is now largely limited to traditional Scots.
Middle English gangen, gongen & early Scots gang, going back to Old English gangan, gongan, going back to Germanic *gangan- (whence Old Saxon & Old High German gangan"to go," Old Norse ganga, Gothic gaggan), probably going back to Indo-European *ǵhenǵh-i̯̯e-, whence also Lithuanian žeñgti "to stride"
Note: Old English gangan, a Class VII strong verb, was used more or less as a synonym of gān, the ancestor of Modern English go entry 1 (itself descended from Germanic *gēn-), though forms other than the present tense and infinitive rarely occur. In other Germanic languages cognates of gangan served and still serve as suppletive forms of the parallel cognates of gān. Compare note at gang entry 1.