How to Use cadge in a Sentence
cadge
verb- She cadged money from her sister.
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Mike, Judith says, would cadge free pizza by offering to climb to the top of his barracks.
— John Kelly, Washington Post, 27 May 2018 -
One recent morning, a man dropped by Mr. Mishurov’s farmyard office to cadge a bucket of corn for his hens.
— James Marson, WSJ, 23 Sep. 2018 -
The vast majority of dogs run free in villages, scavenge food at dumps, cadge the odd handout and cause tens of thousands of human deaths each year from rabies.
— James Gorman, New York Times, 18 Jan. 2016 -
But their games last night devolved into dissertations on solo play while the other starters hung around the 3-point line like beggars hoping to cadge quarters from the stars.
— Michael Powell, New York Times, 15 May 2018 -
What started with independent groups of skaters cadging together D.I.Y. skate parks out of concrete and scrap wood grew into a movement to make the entire city a skate park.
— Jeff Ihaza, New York Times, 7 Apr. 2018 -
A little later, when American troops were stationed nearby, the Chancellor children would try to cadge chewing gum off them.
— Henry Porter, The Hive, 13 Mar. 2017 -
Several calves, their fur a chestnut brown that will later turn white, scurried alongside their mothers adorably, cadging an occasional sip of milk.
— Maria Russo, New York Times, 16 Sep. 2019 -
Malloch never minded hospital food and would often cadge a lunch and stay on for dinner, delighting in the conversation in-between.
— Sam Whiting, SFChronicle.com, 29 June 2019 -
The conventional wisdom had been to cadge donations by artful or emotional pitches, to engage people’s idealism or politics.
— Steven Levy, Wired, 12 Feb. 2021 -
Its influence extended well beyond U.S. borders: Fidel Castro was an enthusiastic reader, and his speeches cadged from it, though without giving credit.
— Glenn Garvin, Anchorage Daily News, 3 Feb. 2018 -
His long Gershwin gig — signing autographs, reminiscing and lecturing on cruise ships and at concerts, cadging freebies and attention at jazz clubs and cabarets — was too enjoyable and, occasionally, lucrative.
— David Margolick, New York Times, 6 Mar. 2018
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'cadge.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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