Noun (1)
the college students scarfed the entire contents of the care package in one sitting
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Noun
At Celine, statement silk scarves proved endlessly versatile—worn as a necktie, tied across the shoulders, or even belted around the waist to bring a pop of color to your everyday essentials.—Minty Mellon, Vogue, 11 Mar. 2026 The teaser trailer shows Miley all grown up, while still wearing a sparkly scarf, as she gets interviewed by Call Her Daddy’s Alex Cooper in the living-room set where Miley had to keep her biggest secret.—Alejandra Gularte, Vulture, 11 Mar. 2026
Verb
On a crowded concourse in the middle of a Saturday morning two months before the start of the season, fans are chugging beers, scarfing Dodger dogs, and even doing a line dance.—Los Angeles Times, 31 Jan. 2026 There’s just something about scarfing oodles of vittles during and after skiing that is far more satisfying than any other post mountain pursuit grubfest.—Outside Online, 24 Dec. 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