trougher
English
Etymology
From trough + -er, due to comparisons between greedy people and pigs with their snouts in the trough.
Noun
trougher (countable and uncountable, plural troughers)
- (chiefly British) A greedy person.
- 1999 August, Dickie Bird, White Cap and Bails:
- A legendary trougher - he could eat for England.
- 2012, James Anderson, Jimmy: My Story:
- Forget the fact I was playing for England at cricket: I was also an Olympic-standard trougher, and so I would order big steaks, burgers, whatever I fancied, and Blacky thought nothing of ordering the same thing, or something similar.
- (by extension) (chiefly British) A careerist politician, especially one representing the Scottish National Party.
- 2017, Dr. Stephen Harkins, Dr. Jairo Lugo-Ocando, Poor News: Media Discourses of Poverty in Times of Austerity, page 119:
- Many of the critical quotations about Rolnik's role in the UN come from Conservative MPs: "The aid budget is a way in which poor people from Britain pay for the lifestyle of rich people in developing countries. We are having to pay taxes to put this international trougher up in a four-star hotel.
- 2022 February 25, Craig Murray, craigmurray.org.uk:
- Humza is the trougher's trougher.
- Alternative spelling of troffer
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