Cadge - meaning and definition. What is Cadge
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What (who) is Cadge - definition

PRACTICE OF IMPLORING OTHERS TO GRANT A FAVOR WITH LITTLE OR NO EXPECTATION OF RECIPROCATION
Beggar; Spanging; Beggars; Panhandler; Beggers; Begger; Cadger; Spange; Beggary; Panhandlers; Mendicity; Beggardom; Beggarhood; Beggarliness; Begged; Begs; Cadge; Cadges; Cadged; Cadging; Beggars (history); Beggarwoman; Self-fundraising; 🤲; Penes (Ancient Greece); Ptochos
  • Beggar in [[Uppsala]], Sweden, 2014
  • Begging from visitors to a holy site, Sarnath, India, 2010
  • Two beggars in [[Rabat]] ([[Morocco]]), 1960.
  • Beggar in the street, 2009
  • A Buddhist monk begging in Japan.
  • A man holding a sign using humor for begging
  • A street beggar in [[India]] reaches into a car (Calcutta Kolkata)
  • Ottawa, Ontario]], Canada. The meter accepts donations for charitable efforts as part of an official effort to discourage panhandling.
  • A mendicant outside ‘''Kalkaji Mandir’''  in Delhi, India
  • "Please do not encourage the beggars", [[Sarahan]], India
  • Begging at traffic lights in [[Patras]], Greece, 2010

Cadge         
·vt & ·vi To carry, as a burden.
II. Cadge ·noun A circular frame on which cadgers carry hawks for sale.
III. Cadge ·vt & ·vi To hawk or peddle, as fish, poultry, ·etc.
IV. Cadge ·vt & ·vi To intrude or live on another meanly; to Beg.
cadge         
(cadges, cadging, cadged)
If someone cadges food, money, or help from you, they ask you for it and succeed in getting it. (mainly BRIT INFORMAL)
Can I cadge a cigarette?...
He could cadge a ride from somebody.
= scrounge
VERB: V n, V n from/off n
cadge         
¦ verb informal, chiefly Brit. ask for or obtain (something to which one is not strictly entitled).
¦ noun Falconry a padded wooden frame on which hooded hawks are carried to the field.
Phrases
on the cadge informal seeking to obtain something without paying for it.
Derivatives
cadger noun
Origin
C17 (in the dialect sense 'carry about'): back-form. from the noun cadger, which denoted an itinerant dealer; the noun is appar. an alt. of cage, perh. confused with the dialect verb cadge 'carry about'.

Wikipedia

Begging

Begging (also panhandling) is the practice of imploring others to grant a favor, often a gift of money, with little or no expectation of reciprocation. A person doing such is called a beggar or panhandler. Beggars may operate in public places such as transport routes, urban parks, and markets. Besides money, they may also ask for food, drinks, cigarettes or other small items.

Internet begging is the modern practice of asking people to give money to others via the Internet, rather than in person. Internet begging may encompass requests for help meeting basic needs such as medical care and shelter, as well as requests for people to pay for vacations, school trips, and other things that the beggar wants but cannot comfortably afford.

Beggars differ from religious mendicants in that some mendicants do not ask for money. Their subsistence is reciprocated by providing society with various forms of religious service, moral education, and preservation of culture.

Examples of use of Cadge
1. It is entirely inappropriate for a Prime Minister to cadge holidays in this way.
2. The accommodation Steal a floor, cadge a bed, rent an apartment, slum it in a two–star and share a shower with a journalist from Norway.
3. The PCSOs were forced to cadge lifts with postmen the libraries because there were not enough police cars to go round at Wadebridge, North Cornwall.
4. "Of course you had to deal with unsanitary conditions sometimes." She also had to deal with those servicemen from Fort Meade who were trying to cadge phone numbers.
5. What great weight is carried in the immortal words "Gotta light?" and the classic opening gambit, "Can I cadge a cig off you?" 13.