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cadge
1[kaj]
verb (used with object)
to obtain by imposing on another's generosity or friendship.
to borrow without intent to repay.
to beg or obtain by begging.
verb (used without object)
to ask, expect, or encourage another person to pay for or provide one's drinks, meals, etc.
to beg.
cadge
2[kaj]
noun
a frame on which hawks are carried to the field.
cadge
/ æ /
verb
to get (food, money, etc) by sponging or begging
noun
a person who cadges
informalengaged in cadging
Other Word Forms
- cadger noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of cadge1
Word History and Origins
Origin of cadge1
Example Sentences
Schwarzenegger made a pilgrimage to Washington to cadge more money from the government, but came home empty-handed.
A visitor lucky enough to cadge an invitation from a member might end up in the company of a Supreme Court justice, the master of an Oxford college or the editor of a London newspaper.
The custom dates back more than 150 years, but was stopped in 1909 by the local constabulary, which saw the "straw bears" as a form of "cadging", or begging, for rewards.
Instead she took a too-expensive Motel 6 room, then couch-surfed, cadged a shared hotel room with a colleague and slept some nights in the airport — which isn’t allowed, she said, but “I chanced it.”
Recent headlines about a black bear found in Disney World and a video of another cadging lunch in front of a cowering mother and child have raised fears of attacks.
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