scraping

[skrey-ping] /ˈskreɪ pɪŋ/
noun
1.
the act of a person or thing that scrapes.
2.
the sound of something being scraped.
3.
Usually, scrapings. something that is scraped off, up, or together.
Origin
1400-50; late Middle English; see scrape, -ing1
Related forms
scrapingly, adverb
nonscraping, adjective
unscraping, adjective

scrape

[skreyp] /skreɪp/
verb (used with object), scraped, scraping.
1.
to deprive of or free from an outer layer, adhering matter, etc., or to smooth by drawing or rubbing something, especially a sharp or rough instrument, over the surface:
to scrape a table to remove paint and varnish.
2.
to remove (an outer layer, adhering matter, etc.) in this way:
to scrape the paint and varnish from a table.
3.
to scratch, injure, or mar the surface of in this way:
to scrape one's arm on a rough wall.
4.
to produce by scraping:
He scraped his initials on the rock.
5.
to collect or do by or as if by scraping; do or gather laboriously or with difficulty (usually followed by up or together):
They managed to scrape together a football team.
6.
to rub harshly on or across (something):
Don't scrape the floor with your boots!
7.
to draw or rub (a thing) roughly across something:
Scrape your shoes on the doormat before you come in.
8.
to level (an unpaved road) with a grader.
verb (used without object), scraped, scraping.
9.
to scrape something.
10.
to rub against something gratingly.
11.
to produce a grating and unmusical tone from a string instrument.
12.
to draw one's foot back noisily along the ground in making a bow.
13.
to manage or get by with difficulty or with only the barest margin:
I barely scraped through on the test.
14.
to economize or save by attention to even the slightest amounts:
By careful scraping they managed to survive.
noun
15.
an act or instance of scraping.
16.
a drawing back of the foot noisily along the ground in making a bow.
17.
a harsh, shrill, or scratching sound made by scraping.
18.
a scraped place:
a scrape on one's elbow.
19.
an embarrassing or distressing situation; predicament:
He is always in some kind of a scrape.
20.
a difference of opinion, fight, or quarrel; scrap.
Origin
before 1000; (v.) Middle English scrapen < Old Norse skrapa; replacing Middle English shrapen, Old English scrapian to scratch (cognate with Old Norse skrapa); (noun) late Middle English: scraper, derivative of the v.
Related forms
scrapable, adjective
scrapeage, noun
unscraped, adjective
Synonyms
14. scrimp, stint, pinch.
Examples from the web for scraping
  • For many students and their families, scraping together the money to pay for college is a big enough hurdle on its own.
  • Ancient forms of tattoo removal included primitive dermabrasion-scraping the skin with rough surfaces, such as sandpaper.
  • She became a connoisseur of sounds: bats clicking, katydids scraping and frogs croaking.
  • Groaning and clawing, neck twisted, white head scraping against the rock.
  • Cicadas one can seldom see anyway, but they are scraping the air.
  • There is scraping of squeaky fiddles in the dark rooms, and cracked old voices sing long-for-gotten songs.
  • The act of scraping or sanding it contaminates nearby objects and air that is inhaled.
  • scraping across oil-stained concrete, it bunches up anthropomorphically.
  • In winter she watches her neighbors scraping the ice and snow off their cars.
  • But screen scraping roused the ire of many travel suppliers and litigation ensued.
British Dictionary definitions for scraping

scraping

/ˈskreɪpɪŋ/
noun
1.
the act of scraping
2.
a sound produced by scraping
3.
(often pl) something scraped off, together, or up; a small amount

scrape

/skreɪp/
verb
1.
to move (a rough or sharp object) across (a surface), esp to smooth or clean
2.
(transitive; often foll by away or off) to remove (a layer) by rubbing
3.
to produce a harsh or grating sound by rubbing against (an instrument, surface, etc)
4.
(transitive) to injure or damage by rough contact: to scrape one's knee
5.
(intransitive) to be very economical or sparing in the use (of) (esp in the phrase scrimp and scrape)
6.
(intransitive) to draw the foot backwards in making a bow
7.
(transitive) to finish (a surface) by use of a scraper
8.
(transitive) to make (a bearing, etc) fit by scraping
9.
bow and scrape, to behave with excessive humility
noun
10.
the act of scraping
11.
a scraped place
12.
a harsh or grating sound
13.
(informal) an awkward or embarrassing predicament
14.
(informal) a conflict or struggle
Derived Forms
scrapable, adjective
scraper, noun
Word Origin
Old English scrapian; related to Old Norse skrapa, Middle Dutch schrapen, Middle High German schraffen
Word Origin and History for scraping

scrape

v.

early 13c., probably from Old Norse skrapa "to scrape, erase," from Proto-Germanic *skrapojan (cf. Old English scrapian "to scrape," Dutch schrapen, German schrappen), from PIE *skerb-, extension of root *(s)ker- "to cut" (see shear (v.)).

Meaning "gather by great effort, collect with difficulty" is from 1540s. Related: Scraped; scraping. To scrape the bottom of the barrel in figurative sense is from 1942, in reference to U.S. employers facing worker shortages during the war.

n.

mid-15c., "a scraping instrument;" late 15c., "act of scraping or scratching," from scrape (v.). Meaning "a shave" is slang from 1859. Meaning "embarrassing or awkward predicament" is recorded from 1709, as OED suggests, "probably from the notion of being 'scraped' in going through a narrow passage."

Idioms and Phrases with scraping