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Synonyms

forager

American  
[fawr-i-jer, for-] / ˈfɔr ɪ dʒər, ˈfɒr- /

noun

  1. a person or animal who goes out in search of food or provisions of any kind.

    The ants you see are the foragers, out looking for food and water, and they represent only a very small number of the total colony.

  2. someone who collects or obtains things through hunting or searching about.

    We meet the protagonist struggling to make ends meet as a scrap-metal forager in a remote community.


Etymology

Origin of forager

First recorded in 1350–1400, for an earlier sense; forag(e) ( def. ) + -er 1 ( def. )

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Haas investigates human behavior in forager societies of the past to better understand human behavior in the present.

From Science Daily • Jan. 24, 2024

There was an especially cute lamb made by Abbi, a forager who, like Dan, brought her own ingredients to the challenge, and a very sleek cartoon-style Highland cow by baker Josh.

From Salon • Sep. 30, 2023

A forager has found a mushroom so rare that she will not share its location for fear of it being damaged.

From BBC • Sep. 28, 2023

Without Jhe to break it down, more juvenile hormone was reaching the brains of these ants, and “soldier behavior was reprogrammed to forager behavior,” Ju says.

From Science Magazine • Sep. 14, 2023

Unfortunately, there are few certainties regarding the lives of our forager ancestors.

From "Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind" by Yuval Noah Harari