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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 3, 2014 is:
cadge \KAJ\ verb
: beg, sponge
Examples:
Mike tried to cadge a cigarette from Paula, but she told him to get his own pack.
"With a straight face I actually said that I was still hungry and tried to cadge a second half-pound burrito. I failed." - From a blog post by Karl Wilder at HuffingtonPost.com, March 4, 2014
Did you know?
As long ago as the 1400s, peddlers traveled the British countryside, each with a packhorse or a horse and cart, first carrying produce from rural farms to town markets, then returning with small wares to sell to country folk. The Middle English name for such traders was "cadgear"; Scottish dialects rendered the term as "cadger." Etymologists are pretty sure the verb "cadge" was created as a back-formation of "cadger" (which is to say, it was formed by removal of the "-er" suffix). At its most general, "cadger" meant "carrier," and the verb "cadge" meant "to carry." More specifically, the verb meant to go about as a cadger or peddler. By the 1800s, it was used when someone who posed as a peddler turned out to be more of a beggar-and that use led to our present-day one.
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languagewebsterdictionaryvocabularymerriam-websterwordmerriamword of the dayword a daywordsenglish