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Scavenge vs Mudlark - What's the difference?

scavenge | mudlark |

As a verb scavenge

is to collect and remove refuse, or to search through refuse, carrion, or abandoned items for useful material.

As a noun mudlark is

a pig; pork.

scavenge

English

Verb

(en-verb)
  • to collect and remove refuse, or to search through refuse, carrion, or abandoned items for useful material
  • to remove unwanted material from something, especially to purify molten metal by removing impurities
  • to expel the exhaust gases from the cylinder of an internal combustion engine, and draw in air for the next cycle
  • to feed on carrion or refuse
  • Derived terms

    * scavenger * scavenge pump

    mudlark

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (slang) A pig; pork.
  • One who scavenges in river or harbor mud for items of value, especially in London during the Industrial Revolution. Also applies to a person scavenging sewers. A person that begs near a river. (rare) A sewer cleaner. (rare)
  • * '>citation
  • *1995 , Isabel Fonseca, Bury Me Standing , Vintage 2007, p. 104:
  • *:the children were nothing like inert: a large population of junior mudlarks , so long unwashed that you could hardly make them out, climbed among the ruins, cheerfully playing the games that all children play – pushing wheels with sticks, flipping rusty lids and bottle caps in makeshift tiddlywinks.
  • A child who spends most of their time in the streets especially in slum areas. A child who plays in the mud. Any dirty or unkempt person.
  • Nickname for a soldier of the Royal Engineers.
  • Assorted birds that are found in muddy places or build their nests with mud. Especially and Alauda arvensis .
  • (Australian) The Grallina cyanoleuca that builds its nest with mud into a bowl-like shape.
  • A racing horse that performs well on muddy or wet tracks.