cadge off

cadge off
phr. v. ขอ (โดยไม่คิดว่าจะคืนให้) จาก
related: ขอ
syn.: cop from

English-Thai dictionary. 2014.

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  • cadge — [kædʒ] v [I and T] [Date: 1600 1700; : Scottish English; Origin: cadger carrier, trader (15 19 centuries), from cadge to tie (14 19 centuries)] BrE informal to ask someone you know for something such as food, money, or cigarettes, because you do… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • cadge — [[t]kæ̱ʤ[/t]] cadges, cadging, cadged VERB If someone cadges food, money, or help from you, they ask you for it and succeed in getting it. [mainly BRIT, INFORMAL] [V n] Can I cadge a cigarette?... [V n from/off n] He could cadge a ride from… …   English dictionary

  • cadge — verb (I, T) BrE informal to ask someone for food or cigarettes because you do not have any or do not want to pay; mooch AmE: cadge sth from/off: I managed to cadge a lift from Joanna. cadger noun (C) …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • mooch — /mutʃ / (say moohch) Colloquial –verb (i) 1. to skulk or sneak. 2. to hang or loiter about. 3. to slouch or saunter along. –verb (t) 4. to steal. 5. to get without paying or at another s expense; cadge. –phrase 6. mooch off, a. to depart …  

  • cadg´er — cadge «kaj», verb, cadged, cadg|ing. –v.t. Informal. to get (something) by begging shamelessly: »For several years he wandered the streets of New York as a bum, cadging handouts from actors (New Yorker). –v.i. 1. Informal. to beg shamelessly: »I… …   Useful english dictionary

  • beg — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. implore, beseech; ask alms. See poverty, request. II (Roget s IV) v. 1. [To ask earnestly or importunately] Syn. entreat, implore, beseech, ask, supplicate, crave, solicit, pray for, urge, plead, sue …   English dictionary for students

  • mooch — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v., slang, cadge, borrow, sponge (inf.), bum (inf.); lift (inf.), snitch (sl.). See request. II (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) v. Sl. cadge, beg, *sponge, *bum off, *leach off, *panhandle, pilfer. III (Roget …   English dictionary for students

  • bite — [c]/baɪt / (say buyt) verb (bit, bitten or, Archaic, bit, biting) –verb (t) 1. to cut into or wound, with the teeth: the dog bit me. 2. to grip with the teeth. 3. to sting, as an insect. 4. to cau …  

  • List of British words not widely used in the United States — Differences between American and British English American English …   Wikipedia

  • List of words having different meanings in British and American English: A–L — Differences between American and British English American English …   Wikipedia

  • List of English back-formations — Back formation refers to either the process of creating a new lexeme (less precisely, a new word ) by removing actual or supposed affixes, or to the neologism formed by such a process. Back formations are shortened words created from longer words …   Wikipedia

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