Word of the Day: Scrooge

Scrooge or scrooge scrooge / skro͞oj   noun 1. one who is miserly, stingy or selfish Within one’s own family, money is not the measure of things, unless the person is an absolute Scrooge. Margaret Atwood, 1939 –   etymology From the made-up name of the tightfisted, hardhearted miser Ebenezer Scrooge in Charles Dickens’ novel “A Christmas Carol”, perhaps inspired by the British dialect verb scrouge (press tight, squeeze, put the screws to). Thank you to Allen Ward for providing this etymology.