cadger in Arabic
Cadger المتسول
Sentence patterns related to "cadger"
1. 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.
2. Gammerstang commented on the word Cadge (verb/noun) - A whining beggar is a Cadger
3. Antonyms for Commensal include parasite, leech, sponge, sponger, moocher, scrounger, mooch, bloodsucker, cadger and drone
4. In Scotland a Cadger is an itinerant peddler of fish.--James Maitland's American Slang Dictionary, 1891
5. “Codger” is probably simply a dialect variation of “cadger,” and originally, in the 18th century, meant a stingy, miserly old man
6. Codger Meaning: "old man, odd person;" 1796, "mean, miserly man;" probably a variant of cadger "beggar" (see cadge… See definitions of Codger.
7. 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)
8. Cadge (v.) "to beg" (1812), "to get by begging" (1848), of uncertain origin, perhaps a back-formation from Cadger "itinerant dealer with a pack-horse" (mid-15c.), which is perhaps from Middle English Cadge "to fasten, to tie" (late 14c.), which probably is from a Scandinavian source (compare Old Norse kögur-barn "swaddled child").