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

mooch

verb
 
/muːtʃ/
 
/muːtʃ/
(informal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they mooch
 
/muːtʃ/
 
/muːtʃ/
he / she / it mooches
 
/ˈmuːtʃɪz/
 
/ˈmuːtʃɪz/
past simple mooched
 
/muːtʃt/
 
/muːtʃt/
past participle mooched
 
/muːtʃt/
 
/muːtʃt/
-ing form mooching
 
/ˈmuːtʃɪŋ/
 
/ˈmuːtʃɪŋ/
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  1. [intransitive] + adv./prep. (British English) to walk slowly with no particular purpose; to be somewhere not doing very much synonym potter
    • He's happy to mooch around the house all day.
    • We had coffee then mooched down to the beach.
  2. [intransitive, transitive] mooch (something) (off somebody) (North American English) to get money, food, etc. from somebody else instead of paying for it yourself synonym cadge
    • He's always mooching off his friends.
  3. Word Originlate Middle English (in the sense ‘to hoard’): probably from Old French muchier (Anglo-Norman muscher) ‘hide, skulk’. Current senses date from the mid 19th cent.
See mooch in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
previously
adverb
 
 
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