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Definition of scrounge verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

scrounge

verb
 
/skraʊndʒ/
 
/skraʊndʒ/
[transitive, intransitive] (informal, disapproving)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they scrounge
 
/skraʊndʒ/
 
/skraʊndʒ/
he / she / it scrounges
 
/ˈskraʊndʒɪz/
 
/ˈskraʊndʒɪz/
past simple scrounged
 
/skraʊndʒd/
 
/skraʊndʒd/
past participle scrounged
 
/skraʊndʒd/
 
/skraʊndʒd/
-ing form scrounging
 
/ˈskraʊndʒɪŋ/
 
/ˈskraʊndʒɪŋ/
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  1. to get something from somebody by asking them for it rather than by paying or working for it synonym cadge
    • scrounge something off somebody He's always scrounging free meals off us.
    • scrounge something from somebody Can I scrounge a lift from you?
    • scrounge something I had to scrounge my bus fare.
    • scrounge off/from somebody I don’t want to spend the rest of my life scrounging off other people.
    • scrounge (for something) What is she scrounging for this time?
    • You're always scrounging.
    Extra Examples
    • I managed to scrounge some food off an old lady.
    • street children scrounging for food
    • Hello, I've come to scrounge some coffee.
    Word Originearly 20th cent.: variant of dialect scrunge ‘steal’.
See scrounge in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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