Noun (1)
the college students scarfed the entire contents of the care package in one sitting
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Noun
The nostalgic and romantic 31-piece collection also spans distressed Madewell jeans and leather skirts and jackets, as well as giftable accessories like crew socks, hooded scarves, and floral brooches.—Victoria Montalti, Refinery29, 10 Nov. 2025 Made popular by Toteme, this two-in-one coat is recognizable by the boxy silhouette with an attached, matching scarf that offers a unique look and extra layer of warmth around the neck.—Rachel Trujillo, PEOPLE, 9 Nov. 2025
Verb
None of those foraging and storing animals are likely to eat the acorns whole, but there are larger animals that are known to scarf the acorns down.—Randy McMullen, Mercury News, 27 Oct. 2025 Gregory scarfs one down like a rabid animal, while Janine, high off iced tea and lemonade, aggressively demands to know what’s inside the drinks.—Ile-Ife Okantah, Vulture, 29 Jan. 2025 See All Example Sentences for scarf
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
probably modification of Middle French dialect (Norman) escreppe, Middle French escherpe sash, sling, from Old French, pilgrim's shoulder bag, from Medieval Latin scrippum
Verb (2)
by alteration
Noun (2)
Middle English skarf, probably from Old Norse skarfr butt end of a plank
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