Word
Of
The
Day
cadge
cadge \KAJ\
verb
To cadge something is to persuade someone to give it to you for free.
Cadge can also mean “to take, use, or borrow (something) without acknowledgment.”
// I don’t know how, but my brother always manages to
cadge an extra scoop of ice cream on his sundaes.
// The last line of the poem is
cadged from Shelley’s “
Ozymandias.”
See the entry >
Examples:
“How could a convenient route between housing estates—and friends’ homes—be an issue? Let me explain—it was all Sherlock Holmes’ fault. Him and his terrifying
Hound Of The Baskervilles. … There were occasions when my imagination took over completely and I ended up going the long way round through the busier, better-lit roads of the village. Those beasties wouldn't dare to come off the greens and into the gardens. I never admitted this to any of my friends, not even those brave enough to
cadge a lift from me on occasion.” — Mary-Jane Duncan,
The Press and Journal (Scotland), 18 Oct. 2025
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