cadge

 
Pronunciation: /kadʒ/

verb

[with object] British informal
  • ask for or obtain (something to which one is not strictly entitled): he cadged fivers off old school friends

noun

Falconry
  • a padded wooden frame on which hooded hawks are carried to the field.
    [apparently an alteration of cage, perhaps confused with the dialect verb cadge 'carry about']

Phrases

on the cadge

informal looking for an opportunity to obtain something without paying for it: they’re all liars and on the cadge

Derivatives

cadger

noun

Origin:

early 17th century (in the dialect sense 'carry about'): back-formation from the noun cadger, which dates from the late 15th century, denoting (in northern English and Scots) an itinerant dealer, whence the verb sense 'hawk, peddle', giving rise to the current verb senses from the early 19th century