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"cadger" Definitions
  1. a person who asks somebody for food, money, etc. especially because they cannot or do not want to pay for it themselves

23 Sentences With "cadger"

How to use cadger in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "cadger" and check conjugation/comparative form for "cadger". Mastering all the usages of "cadger" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The horses were given names such as Acorn, Cadger and Dingley.
And would you mind telling us what cadger had to tell, Chief?
A famous cadger, he had a kamikaze predilection for turning on benefactors and friends.
A beggar is not etymologically one who begs, or a cadger one who cadges.
An unnamed developer wants to build the homes on fields off Cadger Bank, Lanchester.
Well, nothing would suit, but the dustman must have a go, and pitch into the cadger.
Arra, dear shoy, I sowed them in my belly, and sold the hens to a cadger.
He was not a regular gondolier, so he had none of the cadger and prostitute about him.
A shnorrer is someone who is a monster cadger, always on the take and never giving back.
The military committee in congress couldn't go back on Mr. cadger, and he daren't go back on my father.
The Queen's cadger is asking all members of both the Commons and the Lords for a royal whip-round for her Maj.
It will stand in marked contrast to the ethics of the minority, whether that of any self-sufficient solitudinarian or self-debasing cadger.
It will stand in marked contrast to the ethics of the minority, whether that of any self-sufficient solitudinarian or self-debasing cadger.
A cadger is a carrier who travels between town and country with butter, eggs, and shop-wares or someone who sells things in the street.
A self-confessed cadger from Dersingham has been given a huge thank you by the personnel for the support she has given to their Kenyan appeal.
But the home fans had to wait until 65 minutes to feel certain of the points, Fraser's free-kick being headed on by Chris Steel for Graeme Cadger to knock home.
The station opened on 1 September 1862 by the North Eastern Railway. It was situated on the north side of Cadger Bank. The NER doubled the station's tracks in anticipation of the demand from collieries along with Knitsley, Bearpark, Malton and Langley. Like the rest of the stations on the line, this station closed to passengers on 1 May 1939.
The film then received limited theatrical release in Canada and the United States in fall 1987. The film received two Genie Award nominations at the 9th Genie Awards in 1988, for Best Cinematography (Richard Leiterman) and Best Sound Editing (Robin Leigh, Richard Cadger, Jane Tattersall, Penny Hozy and Peter McBurnie).Liam Lacey, "Quebec film picks up 14 nominations: Zoo paces race for Genies". The Globe and Mail, February 17, 1988.
Fabill 9 (The Fox, the Wolf and the Cadger) is the first of the second set of three Reynardian taillis in the poem. It presents the wolf for the first time in his true fabill colours as a ruthless and lordly predator demanding obeisance. The tod similarly manifests as a wily trickster who (in contrast to the first half of the cycle) completely succeeds in outwitting his victims. The business also involves a human character as a full protagonist.
CookieCadger is a graphical Java app that automates sidejacking and replay of HTTP requests, to help identify information leakage from applications that use unencrypted GET requests. It is a cross-platform open-source utility based on the Wireshark suite which can monitor wired Ethernet, insecure Wi-Fi, or load a packet capture file for offline analysis. Cookie Cadger has been used to highlight the weaknesses of youth team sharing sites such as Shutterfly (used by AYSO soccer league) and TeamSnap.
Punch magazine ran a poem about an eagle, which threatened a baby in its pram, which could not be diverted even when offered three different kinds of biscuit. A song is recorded in the same volume, called "Gently rising Tullibody" which praises the town and Abercromby's military victory in Egypt over the French. Yet another poem which mentions Tullibody is from the same book and involves a dialogue between a Besom Cadger and a Fisherwoman. The title is Causey Courtship.
It was difficult of access compared with the "Old Course" on the East Parklands; moreover it could be unpleasant (depending on wind direction) on account of smells emanating from nearby animal processing industries on the banks of the Torrens. It was, however, supplied gratis by Bagot and Bennett, whereas P. B. Coglin, who had the lease for the "Old Course", demanded ₤1,500 for its use. A notable race held in this period was the 1865 Grand Steeplechase won by the horseman-poet Adam Lindsay Gordon on Cadger. The Club folded in 1869 through bankruptcy then was revived in 1873 after its debts were paid by a consortium of businessmen.
At the beginning of the taill, the wolf recruits Lowrence into his service. The fox either is, or pretends to be, reluctant but appears to have no choice. While in service, Lowrence opportunistically plants in his master a desire for the largest and most valuable fish (the mysterious "nekhering") from the cart of a passing fish merchant (the cadger) and uses his "demonstration" of how it can be stolen as a single ploy to outwit both the wolf and the man. The plot of this and the next fabill, which have many parallels and ring many changes, both explore the complex relationship between the wolf, the fox and a man.

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