Noun (1)
the college students scarfed the entire contents of the care package in one sitting
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Noun
The chart-topper sparked many rumors about the identity of the apricot-scarf-wearing womanizer.—
René Ostberg,
Encyclopedia Britannica,
2 July 2026 Inside, the spacious main compartment easily held a heavy travel wallet, an oversized scarf, a water bottle, and my headphones with plenty of room to spare.—
Charley Ward,
Condé Nast Traveler,
3 July 2026
Verb
The guys now scarf their slices standing up while their headlamps beam in the dark.—
Britta Lokting,
Rolling Stone,
13 Oct. 2024 There’s nothing like baking (and scarfing) Christmas cookies.—
Randy McMullen,
Mercury News,
18 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