What's the difference between cadge and cadie?

Cadge


Definition:

  • (v. t. & i.) To carry, as a burden.
  • (v. t. & i.) To hawk or peddle, as fish, poultry, etc.
  • (v. t. & i.) To intrude or live on another meanly; to beg.
  • (n.) A circular frame on which cadgers carry hawks for sale.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Kerouac and his friends were still restlessly hitch-hiking across the continent, cadging drinks and borrowing money for a joint, while Carr quietly pursued a career that lasted for more than four decades.
  • (2) High rail (and bus) fares at peak times add to social exclusion, by barring poorer people from using trains and forcing them into dependence on cars, either by running cars they can't really afford or by cadging lifts from family, friends and neighbours.
  • (3) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Share Share this post Facebook Twitter Pinterest close Facebook Twitter Pinterest Share Share this post Facebook Twitter Pinterest close Updated at 7.40pm BST 7.20pm BST Obama camp hits Romney over '47%' comments The Obama campaign has produced a web video hitting Romney for dismissing 47% of Americans as craven spongiforms just looking to cadge the next handout from the producing class.
  • (4) Or they can lobby ministers privately, cadging 15-minute shards of time and making a case, over and over again.
  • (5) At Oxford, Crawford was a joint founder of the internationalist poetry magazine Verse and "cadged" poems off the likes of Edwin Morgan, Les Murray and Seamus Heaney, who enclosed £50 with his poem to help with production costs: "His generosity was not only in language, but also in actual dosh."
  • (6) While some celebrated the idea that Spain had cadged billions of euros from Europe for nothing, others worried that it had been forced to crawl to Brussels with a begging bowl.

Cadie


Definition:

  • (n.) Alt. of Caddie

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Other artist records were achieved for Robert Delaunay, Cady Noland, Jean Dubuffet, Diane Arbus, Jean-Michel Basquiat, René Magritte and Chaim Soutine.
  • (2) According to the risk group definition suggested by Cady in 1979, low risk patients may be subjected to lobectomy only, then placed on thyroxine treatment and followed clinically with thyroglobulin determination.
  • (3) An expert system (cadi-yac), written in Turbo-Prolog and working on IBM PC and Bacanal + (a management software of microbiology laboratory) was used to recognize and correct the phenotype of antibiotic sensibility.
  • (4) From this inaccurate argument, Hasan moves on to another one: the history of women's rights activists and an apparent argument that early feminists were anti-choice and … well, I'm not entirely sure what his argument is, other than to note this historical fact and then deviate into modern anti-choice feminism: "Then there is the history you gloss over: some of the earliest advocates of women's rights, such Mary Wollstonecraft, were anti-abortion, as were pioneers of US feminism such as Susan B Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton; the latter referred to abortion as "infanticide".
  • (5) The operation performed was a total mastectomy with axillary dissection slightly modified according to Cady.
  • (6) nyandnj 09 October 2014 2:46pm In the U.S., I adore Elizabeth Cady Stanton, an early suffergist.
  • (7) White American women and African-Americans have long had a complicated relationship on this score, epitomised by the bitter fallout between the 19th-century women's rights pioneer Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Frederick Douglass, when the two former allies split over whether black men should get the vote before white women.
  • (8) As Cady (la Lohan, who has also undergone many changes in the past decade) notes in Mean Girls, “In Girl World, Halloween is the one night a year when a girl can dress like a total slut, and no other girls can say anything about it.” In other words, it’s something that pitiable and confused teenage girls do, like affecting to enjoy smoking, or pretending to be interested in every boring thing some boring boy says in the hope he’ll provide her with some self-validation.
  • (9) Similar tributes formed for prominent suffragists Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Carrie Chapman Catt, Mary Garrett Hay and Alva Belmont, according to the New York Times .
  • (10) The mistakes detected by cadi-yac, were often interpreted as deficiency of API system by humans experts.
  • (11) Cady et al., (1968) found only four cases in a group of 2,500 cases of laryngeal cancer seen over a 25-year period.
  • (12) He's as close to Max Cady in Cape Fear as he is to Dangeruss."

Words possibly related to "cadie"