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Rummage   /rˈəmɪdʒ/   Listen
Rummage

verb
(past & past part. rummaged; pres. part. rummaging)
1.
Search haphazardly.
noun
1.
A jumble of things to be given away.
2.
A thorough search for something (often causing disorder or confusion).  Synonym: ransacking.



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Rummage" Quotes from Famous Books



... but it happened that I had never seen any in my life. I remember I thought it must be white and soft like the string of a firecracker. So I began to rummage through all the drawers and boxes for fuse. One of the first things I came across was a coil of black, stiff, tarry string, but I threw it to one side and went on looking for fuse. After I had hunted half an hour and found none, I gave up. As I stood there thinking, a good deal discouraged, ...
— Track's End • Hayden Carruth

... stocked with its hardware; even a carpet lay on the floor, for Mrs. Lloyd having heard from David a laughing declaration of Matilda's present longing for an old carpet, had immediately given permission to the children to rummage in the lumber room and take anything they found that was not too good. Matilda was very much afraid there would be nothing that did not come under that description; however, a little old piece of carpet was found that somehow had escaped being ...
— Trading • Susan Warner

... though he was a man of wide and not very edifying experience. The tactics which had started his friendship with Joanna he had learned at the shorthand and typewriting college where he had learned his clerking job—and they had brought him a rummage of adventures, some transient, some sticky, some dirty, some glamorous. He had met girls of a fairly good class—for his looks caused much to be forgiven him—as well as the typists, shop-girls and waitresses of his more usual association. But he ...
— Joanna Godden • Sheila Kaye-Smith

... you boys go rummage the store room for the corn popper. The corn's in a corn-meal sack on the ...
— The Rules of the Game • Stewart Edward White

... cruiser of the Crown; "yes! I, and my officers, will taste of your banquet! But the viands shall be such as these hirelings of the King shall little relish!—Pull with a will, my men, pull; in an hour, you shall rummage the store-rooms of that ...
— The Red Rover • James Fenimore Cooper


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