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    bludge
    /blʌdʒ/

    verb

    • 1. shirk responsibility and live off the efforts of others: "they were sick of bludging on the public"

    noun

    • 1. an easy job or assignment: "that night shift must be the biggest bludge on earth"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to take advantage of the efforts of other people rather than working hard or taking responsibility for something yourself: Some people believe that unions encourage workers to bludge and be less productive. He says if people want children then they should pay for them themselves and not be bludging from other taxpayers. [ T ]

  3. transitive verb. chiefly Australia and New Zealand : sponge sense 3. bludger noun chiefly Australia and New Zealand. Did you know? Though they can be annoying, people who bludgebludgersare relatively harmless. On the other hand, a bully armed with a bludgeon —a "bludgeoner"—can cause serious harm.

  4. 4 meanings: 1. to scrounge from (someone) 2. to evade work 3. archaic to act as a pimp 4. a very easy task; undemanding.... Click for more definitions.

  5. Bludge definition: to shirk.. See examples of BLUDGE used in a sentence.

  6. Definition of bludge verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. 1. (when: intr, often foll by on) to scrounge from (someone) 2. ( intr) to evade work. 3. ( intr) archaic to act as a pimp. n. a very easy task; undemanding employment. [C19: back formation from slang bludger pimp, from bludgeon]

  8. 4 days ago · bludge (third-person singular simple present bludges, present participle bludging, simple past and past participle bludged) ( Australia, obsolete, slang) To live off the earnings of a prostitute. ( Australia, New Zealand, slang) To not earn one's keep, to live off someone else or off welfare when one could be working.