scavenger

noun

scav·​en·​ger ˈska-vən-jər How to pronounce scavenger (audio)
1
chiefly British : a person employed to remove dirt and refuse from streets
2
: one that scavenges: such as
a
: a garbage collector
b
: a junk collector
c
: a chemically active substance acting to make innocuous or remove an undesirable substance
3
: an organism that typically feeds on refuse or carrion

Did you know?

You might guess that scavenger is a derivative of scavenge, but the reverse is actually true; scavenger is the older word, first appearing in English in the early 16th century, and the back-formation scavenge came into English in the mid-17th century. Scavenger is an alteration of the earlier scavager, itself from Anglo-French scawageour, meaning "collector of scavage." In medieval times, scavage was a tax levied by towns and cities on goods put up for sale by nonresidents in order to provide resident merchants with a competitive advantage. The officers in charge of collecting this tax were later made responsible for keeping streets clean, and that's how scavenger came to refer to a public sanitation employee in Great Britain before acquiring its current sense referring to a person who salvages discarded items.

Examples of scavenger in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Overall, the researchers showed that in areas where the nonnative scavengers are almost absent, scavenging activity was higher. Bygennaro Tomma, science.org, 11 July 2024 Happily, actors Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, and Adam Driver proved worthy successors to the smugglers, scavengers, Jedi masters, and Sith Lords who preceded them. Jennifer M. Wood, WIRED, 21 Nov. 2024 Black bears are consistent and indiscriminate scavengers. Katie Hill, Outdoor Life, 14 Nov. 2024 Her father appears chiefly as the builder of the family home and a scavenger of secondhand goods to fill it. Kathryn Schulz, The New Yorker, 26 Aug. 2024 See all Example Sentences for scavenger 

Word History

Etymology

alteration of earlier scavager, from Anglo-French scawageour collector of scavage (duty collected from non-resident street merchants), from skawage scavage, from Middle French dialect (Flanders) escauver to inspect, from Middle Dutch scouwen; akin to Old English scēawian to look at — more at show

First Known Use

1530, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of scavenger was in 1530

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Cite this Entry

“Scavenger.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/scavenger. Accessed 22 Dec. 2024.

Kids Definition

scavenger

noun
scav·​en·​ger ˈskav-ən-jər How to pronounce scavenger (audio)
1
: someone or something that scavenges
2
: an organism (as a vulture or hyena) that usually feeds on dead or decaying matter
Etymology

from earlier scavager, from early French skawageour "one who collects a tax on goods sold by merchants from another town," from an early French dialect word escauver "to inspect"

Word Origin
In the U.S., scavenger is not the title of a particular occupation, but it is in Great Britain. There it means "street cleaner," which is a use close to the original meaning. In English towns in the Middle Ages, a tax was placed on goods offered for sale by merchants who came from another town for market day. This tax was called a skawage, from an early French dialect word escauwage, meaning "a showing or inspection (of goods)." The skawage gave the local merchants an advantage and discouraged outsiders from selling in the town. In this way it was like our modern-day tariff, or "tax on imports." The official whose duty it was to collect this tax was called the skawager. This word was later spelled scavager and then scavenger. When the towns came to need someone to keep the streets clean, this duty also became the job of the scavenger. The word scavenger is now used in the British Isles for all street cleaners. By the time British colonists started towns in America, the skawage tax was no longer collected, and the word scavenger came to be used here in its more general sense of "someone who collects usable things from what has been discarded."

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