Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun Old iron, as cuttings of plates and other miscellaneous fragments, accumulated for reworking.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word scrap-iron.

Examples

  • I saw scrap-iron hutments and tiled rooftops the color of autumn leaves, and smoky blue hillsides creased by waterfalls and half-eaten by gray monsoon clouds.

    Buddha’s Savage Peace 2009

  • 'I'll hold you responsible, Captain Munster,' says he to me, mad enough to eat scrap-iron.

    Chapter 18 2010

  • I saw scrap-iron hutments and tiled rooftops the color of autumn leaves, and smoky blue hillsides creased by waterfalls and half-eaten by gray monsoon clouds.

    Buddha’s Savage Peace 2009

  • I had a splendid constitution, a stomach that would digest scrap-iron, and

    Chapter 6 2010

  • When it comes down to hard - pan, I can digest scrap-iron.

    Chapter 1 2010

  • In London, Maroussia tried to start a literary career, meeting HG Wells, before finally following her husband to Northern Ireland where he set up a scrap-iron merchants, while she, writing ambitions on hold, taught ballet.

    Dan Edelstyn: My quest for the family spirit Stuart Jeffries 2010

  • I saw scrap-iron hutments and tiled rooftops the color of autumn leaves, and smoky blue hillsides creased by waterfalls and half-eaten by gray monsoon clouds.

    Buddha’s Savage Peace 2009

  • One such hire was Mr. Cayne, a former scrap-iron salesman who joined the firm in 1969 and eventually became one of its top brokers to wealthy individual clients.

    Cayne to Step Down 2008

  • A glib and gruff former scrap-iron salesman from Chicago with a penchant for cigars, golf and cards, Mr. Cayne had often taken off Thursday afternoons and Fridays that summer to play golf near his New Jersey vacation home.

    Lost Opportunities Haunt 2008

  • Over the years, Mr. Cayne, a onetime scrap-iron salesman who joined the firm in 1969, amassed millions of shares in the company.

    Toward the Exit: Cayne 2008

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.