Cadger.

One who carries butter, eggs, and poultry to market; a packman or huckster. From cadge (to carry). Hence the frame on which hawks were carried was called “a cadge,” and the man who carried it, a “cadger.” A man of low degree.

“Every cadger thinks himself as good as an earl.”—McDonald: Malcolm, part ix, chap. xlv. p. 183.

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Cacodæmon
Cacoethes (Greek)
Cacus
Cad
Caddice
Caddy
Cade
Cader Idris
Cadessia (Battle of)
Cadet
Cadger
Cadi
Cadmean Letters (The)
Cadmean Victory (Greek, Kadmeia nikê; Latin, Cadmea Victoria)
Cadmeans
Cadmus
Cadogan (Ca-dug-an)
Caduoeus
Cadurci
Cædmon
Cærite Franchise (The)