English Words in Action, Group S
(a variety of English words which have developed through history and are currently used in our modern age)
Simply click on this banner (or the following link) and you will be on your way to stimulate your brain for greater word comprehension with quizzes based on some of the words in this unit.
2. Etymology: from Middle English sker, "fear, dread" + Latin mango, "dealer."
Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
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Sometimes city dumps are places where poor people scavenge for pieces of old furniture, etc. in order to survive.
2. Some animals search for carrion as food or for discarded food: Jim saw some cats in town that aren't fed by anyone; so, they live in the streets and parks where they scavenge for food.During his trip to Africa, Mike often saw vultures, hyenas, jackals, and other animals which were scavenging for food from the bodies of animals that the lions had left after they had finished eating what they had killed.
2. A person who searches for and collects discarded items of clothes, furniture, etc.: It isn't unusual to see a scavenger, or scavengers, going through dumpsters in cities looking for something that can be used.
There were several terms for scavengers in London during the 1800s including bone-pickers, rag-gatherers, pure-finders, dredger men, mud-larks, sewer-hunters, dustmen, night-soil men, bunters, toshers, and shoremen; all of which were recycling the junk or trash that they collected.
2. Etymology: from Yiddish shlak, "cheap, shoddy, or inferior; related to German Schlacke, Schlag, "dregs, scum, dross."
Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
so you can see more of Mickey Bach's cartoons.
2. Etymology: from Yiddish or Jewish shlak, “a hit, a strike, a blow” + German -meister, "a person in charge of a specified thing."
Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
so you can see more of Mickey Bach's cartoons.
Teresa was schmoozing with her friends Mark and Mildred the entire evening.
2. Etymology: from Yiddish shmues, from Hebrew shmuot, "to report, to gossip".Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
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2. A pejorative term meaning that someone is a stupid, an idiotic, or a detestable person: During the soccer game, James felt like a schmuck when he kicked the ball into the wrong goal!
3.Etymology: from Yiddish, Jewish, Hebrew shmok, "fool."
Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
so you can see more of Mickey Bach's cartoons.
2. To talk about a person or something in a way that shows disapproval and a lack of any respect: Jane's brother scoffed at her when she told him that she planned to become an actress because he felt that she had no more talent than he did.
3. Etymology: from Scandinavian skof, "mockery, jest."
Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
so you can see more of Mickey Bach's cartoons.
2. Etymology: the term scorch came from Old Norse skorpna, "to dry up, to shrivel".
Try to roast the meat and don't scorch it.
While Ronda was ironing Ralph's shirt, she was scorching it because the iron was too hot.
2. To damage something as a result of making it very dry: The hot sun and the very dry weather scorched the crops in several areas of the country.2. Rushing around quickly in an undignified way: The scramble by the holiday shoppers to get on the bus made it difficult for Rosetta to keep her balance.
3. The rapid departure of military aircraft when responding to an alert or an imminent crisis: The scramble by the fighter pilots was done in perfect synchronization with the other planes.
Companies are currently scrambling to recruit skilled workers.
Tensions were increasing as diplomats scrambled to prevent another war.
2. To jumble or to combine in a haphazard manner: Try not to scramble the box of socks too badly because they still need to be sorted.3. To assemble in a disorderly fashion or to be in a state of disarray: At the start of the seasonal sale, the shoppers were scrambling at the front entrance of the store.
4. To cook eggs that have been mixed together: Eleanor was scrambling the eggs for her family's breakfast. 5. To change, to modify or to add a distortion or confusing sounds to an electronic signal in order to confuse the recipient unless he or she has a special receiver: The environmental technician was doing her best to scramble the tweet message to the twitter base of supporters.
6. To bring about the flight of aircraft quickly in response to an alert or crisis situation: The pilots quickly scrambled their aircraft into the air from their inland base.
In Margaret's screed against the recording industry, she blamed the producer for ruining her singing career.
2. Etymology: from Old English screade, "lengthy speech or writing."Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
so you can see more of Mickey Bach's cartoons.
Links to all of the groups of English words in action, Groups A to Z.
You may see the bibliographic list of sources of information for these words in action.