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

COLLECTING UNHARVESTED FOOD FROM ALREADY HARVESTED CROPS
Wool Gathering; Woolgatherer; Scrounge; Gleaned; Gleans; Glean; Gleaner (harvest); Woolgathering
  • Impoverished Germans gleaning in 1956
  • 50px
  • 50px
  • Gleaning in a [[seagrass meadow]]<ref name=Nessa2019 />
  • Arthur Hughes]]
  • ''Gathering Wool'' by [[Henry Herbert La Thangue]]
  • ''[[The Gleaners]]'' by [[Jean-François Millet]], 1857

scrounge         
One who continually uses others for selfish material gain.
That scrounge is always asking me for a favor.
scrounge         
(scrounges, scrounging, scrounged)
If you say that someone scrounges something such as food or money, you disapprove of them because they get it by asking for it, rather than by buying it or earning it. (INFORMAL)
Williams had to scrounge enough money to get his car out of the car park...
The government did not give them money, forcing them to scrounge for food.
VERB: V n, V for n [disapproval]
scrounge         
v. (colloq.)
1) (D; intr.) ('to scavenge') to scrounge for
2) (D; tr.) ('to wheedle') to scrounge from (he scrounged a cigarette from me)

Wikipedia

Gleaning

Gleaning is the act of collecting leftover crops from farmers' fields after they have been commercially harvested or on fields where it is not economically profitable to harvest. It is a practice described in the Hebrew Bible that became a legally enforced entitlement of the poor in a number of Christian kingdoms. Modern day "dumpster diving", when done for food or culinary ingredients, is seen as a similar form of food recovery. Gleaning is also still used to provide nutritious harvested foods for those in need. It is modernly used due to a need for a national network to aid food recovery organizations in the United States. This is called the National Gleaning Project which was started by the Center for Agriculture and Food Systems at Vermont Law and Graduate School to aid those less fortunate much like the old Christian Kingdoms.

Examples of use of scrounge
1. Instead of sympathizing with the sufferers, they preferred to scrounge saying such chances come after years.
2. Today, the UN must scrounge for help in halting genocide in Darfur.
3. But I‘m not going to scrounge off other workers to do it.
4. Kindred, of Battle Creek, couldn‘t scrounge up the $10 payment to get the document.
5. Despite their successes, many continued to scrounge for art materials, food, and other necessities after the end of Soviet subsidies threw the country into an economic freefall.