Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at scrooge's.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Scrooge's.
Examples
-
My goal is to one day build a stairway of manga to the top of the Transamerica Pyramid, like Uncle Scrooge's stairway of money in "Walt Disney's Comics & Stories #157".
-
He will, after all, be splitting Scrooge's estate with his brothers Louie and Dewey.
How the Death Tax Hurts the Poor Steven E. Landsburg 2011
-
Also known as Scrooge, this is the best film version of the penny-pinching Scrooge's journey to spiritual enlightenment by way of visits from supernatural visitors.
John W. Whitehead: Have a Very Merry Celluloid Christmas John W. Whitehead 2011
-
So while the kids are more excited to witness Scrooge's transformation or decorate the family tree than they are about their Gaelic evening, they are present in each of these three small but important traditions.
Brad Harrington: Christmas Presence Trumps Christmas Presents Every Time Brad Harrington 2011
-
Scrooge's heart opens, and he takes responsibility for contributing to his family and community.
Levi Ben-Shmuel: Scrooge, Vision And You: Cultivating Spirituality In The Workplace Levi Ben-Shmuel 2011
-
Let's compare part of the bravura description of Scrooge's cheapness and lack of humanity from the opening pages to what Kornbluth has boiled it down to.
Lev Raphael: Does A Christmas Carol Really Need to be Rescued? Lev Raphael 2011
-
The Heritage Foundation's Robert Rector, whose philosophy for decades now regarding the poor can be summed up with Ebenezer Scrooge's line: "Are their no prisons?"
Joseph A. Palermo: The Perils for Obama of Not Talking About Poverty in America Joseph A. Palermo 2011
-
Claire Tomalin, whose highly acclaimed biography of Dickens was published last year, said that Scrooge's popularity was surprising given that his 21st-century equivalent might be a banker.
-
The Heritage Foundation's Robert Rector, whose philosophy for decades now regarding the poor can be summed up with Ebenezer Scrooge's line: "Are their no prisons?"
Joseph A. Palermo: The Perils for Obama of Not Talking About Poverty in America Joseph A. Palermo 2011
-
So while the kids are more excited to witness Scrooge's transformation or decorate the family tree than they are about their Gaelic evening, they are present in each of these three small but important traditions.
Brad Harrington: Christmas Presence Trumps Christmas Presents Every Time Brad Harrington 2011
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.