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单词 scrounger
释义

Definition of scrounger in English:

scrounger

nounˈskraʊndʒəˈskraʊndʒər
derogatory, informal
  • A person who borrows from or lives off others.

    〈非正式,贬〉借钱者;寄生虫

    with modifier welfare scroungers
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Others will envisage a scrounger eager to take advantage of state benefits.
    • Yes, there are scroungers, layabouts, bad parents, but they are not limited to teenagers, or single mothers, but come in all sexes, ages, shapes, sizes and races.
    • Underlying the Tories' agenda is the hidden assumption that immigration is bad: that immigrants are a bunch of scroungers who want to live off the fat of the land we have created.
    • MPs, councillors and all their cronies are nothing more than scroungers, spongers, parasites.
    • This may be because the complicated, lengthy claim forms confuse many people or perhaps they are scared to claim benefits for fear they will be labelled as scroungers.
    • She wants everyone to know she is not a scrounger and that life in Britain for a newly arrived asylum seeker is a struggle.
    • He would be regaling his friends for years with stories about welfare scroungers driving late-model saloon cars: ‘I seen it with me own eyes -’
    • However, in spite of popular hostility to scroungers, the evidence suggests that the proportion of the poor in modern Britain is similar to that of the past.
    • It is strange, in fact, that the perception of immigrants as unproductive scroungers has had such staying power.
    • With a similar system to Australia, most of these people wouldn't get into our country, weeding out criminals, drug dealers and social security scroungers.
    • Public attitudes can quite clearly be changed - but not by legislation which reinforces the notion that refugees are scroungers trying to rip us off.
    • But I can tell you this: they are not throwing their money around on scroungers.
    • Some try to demonise all who seek a new life in this country as work-shy scroungers intent only on getting their slice of ‘soft-touch’ Britain's welfare state.
    • She has certainly carved out a comfortable career for herself - as a complete scrounger.
    • And I have known more dole scroungers who refuse to work than I care to think about.
    • This report decried the rise of begging in the resort, and was headlined: ‘The homeless and the scroungers mar genteel Bournemouth's image’.
    • We're not scroungers, just trying to do the best for our children.
    • I feel like a bit of a scrounger complaining but people over 60 are due their allowance and we haven't got it.
    • Though he can't suffer bores, scroungers and pseudo-intellectuals, he finds it very difficult to say ‘no’ to anyone.
    Synonyms
    beggar, borrower, parasite, scrounge, cadger
    informal sponger, freeloader, junketeer
    Scottish informal sorner
    North American informal mooch, moocher, schnorrer
    Australian/New Zealand informal bludger

Rhymes

lounger

Definition of scrounger in US English:

scrounger

nounˈskrounjərˈskraʊndʒər
derogatory, informal
  • 1A person who borrows from or lives off others.

    〈非正式,贬〉借钱者;寄生虫

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Yes, there are scroungers, layabouts, bad parents, but they are not limited to teenagers, or single mothers, but come in all sexes, ages, shapes, sizes and races.
    • However, in spite of popular hostility to scroungers, the evidence suggests that the proportion of the poor in modern Britain is similar to that of the past.
    • This report decried the rise of begging in the resort, and was headlined: ‘The homeless and the scroungers mar genteel Bournemouth's image’.
    • MPs, councillors and all their cronies are nothing more than scroungers, spongers, parasites.
    • Public attitudes can quite clearly be changed - but not by legislation which reinforces the notion that refugees are scroungers trying to rip us off.
    • I feel like a bit of a scrounger complaining but people over 60 are due their allowance and we haven't got it.
    • Underlying the Tories' agenda is the hidden assumption that immigration is bad: that immigrants are a bunch of scroungers who want to live off the fat of the land we have created.
    • This may be because the complicated, lengthy claim forms confuse many people or perhaps they are scared to claim benefits for fear they will be labelled as scroungers.
    • But I can tell you this: they are not throwing their money around on scroungers.
    • Others will envisage a scrounger eager to take advantage of state benefits.
    • And I have known more dole scroungers who refuse to work than I care to think about.
    • Though he can't suffer bores, scroungers and pseudo-intellectuals, he finds it very difficult to say ‘no’ to anyone.
    • She wants everyone to know she is not a scrounger and that life in Britain for a newly arrived asylum seeker is a struggle.
    • Some try to demonise all who seek a new life in this country as work-shy scroungers intent only on getting their slice of ‘soft-touch’ Britain's welfare state.
    • It is strange, in fact, that the perception of immigrants as unproductive scroungers has had such staying power.
    • He would be regaling his friends for years with stories about welfare scroungers driving late-model saloon cars: ‘I seen it with me own eyes -’
    • We're not scroungers, just trying to do the best for our children.
    • She has certainly carved out a comfortable career for herself - as a complete scrounger.
    • With a similar system to Australia, most of these people wouldn't get into our country, weeding out criminals, drug dealers and social security scroungers.
    Synonyms
    beggar, borrower, parasite, scrounge, cadger
    1. 1.1 A cleverly resourceful person who finds and procures items for a specific purpose.
      no team at camp had a better scrounger than our Eddie
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更新时间:2024/10/19 13:26:13