¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fadged
1. fadge [v] - See also: fadge
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fadged
Literary usage of Fadged
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Lectures on Poetry by John William Mackail (1911)
"... not without strong reason, to prove that the beginning of Shakespeare's play
is either lost, and replaced by some fadged and abbreviated stage-version, ..."
2. The Golden Days of the Early English Church from the Arrival of Theodore to by Henry Hoyle Howorth (1917)
"In regard to this reading," he says, " there is no doubt, and all are agreed."i The
word, says Stephens, is a form of faked, fadged, ..."
3. Our Boys and Girls by Oliver Optic (1871)
"It was because they were fadged out of old-fashioned, secondhand things.
Aunt Esther had once been a tailoress, but Judith couldn't see that that was ..."