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DRUDGE

 - 4 dictionary results

drudge

[druhj] noun, verb, drudged, drudg⋅ing.
–noun
1. a person who does menial, distasteful, dull, or hard work.
2. a person who works in a routine, unimaginative way.
–verb (used without object)
3. to perform menial, distasteful, dull, or hard work.

Origin:
1485–95; cf. OE man's name Drycghelm helmet maker, equiv. to drycg (akin to drēogan to work) + helm helm 2


drudger, noun
drudg⋅ing⋅ly, adverb


3. toil, hack, grub, plod, slave.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source Link To DRUDGE
drudge 1   (drŭj)   
n.  A person who does tedious, menial, or unpleasant work.
intr.v.   drudged, drudg·ing, drudg·es
To do tedious, unpleasant, or menial work.

[From Middle English druggen, to labor; akin to Old English drēogan, to work, suffer.]
drudg'er n., drudg'ing·ly adv.
drudge 2   (drŭj)   
n.   & v. Chesapeake Bay
Variant of dredge1.
"Out here on the Chesapeake, they call it 'drudging for arsters,'" says Charles Kuralt in his book On the Road with Charles Kuralt. The Standard English verb dredge is pronounced with a centralized vowel by Chesapeake Bay oyster fishermen, yielding drudge. Drudge in turn has been picked up by city dwellers on the Delmarva Peninsula; a survey of some young people from Baltimore revealed that they did not even know that there was a Standard English verb dredge. Kuralt gives the regional pronunciation a whimsical folk etymology with the standard meaning of drudge, "to do tedious or unpleasant work," observing, "Whatever you do for a living, it's not as hard as 'drudging for arsters.'"
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

drudge  (n.)
1494, "one employed in mean, servile, or distasteful work," missing in O.E. and M.E., but apparently related to O.E. dreogan "to work, suffer, endure." The verb is from 1548. Drudgery is from 1550.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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