So, ever the intrepid scourer of deals, I found some great freebies this week.
From the newsday.com
Hard as I tried, I could not make a single mark on the disc with the scourer.
From the newscientist.com
A steel scourer in one corner worked well, but I worried it would scratch the glass.
From the chron.com
If the acquisition occurs, Cavalier Wool will be the only wool scourer in New Zealand.
From the scoop.co.nz
White vinegar is a great degreaser, bicarb soda can be used as an abrasive and salt is a natural scourer.
From the au.news.yahoo.com
He had used this scourer on the driver's side and the hood.
From the washingtonpost.com
You know, those little kitchen scouring pads that have a sponge on one side and a green scourer on the other.
From the washingtonpost.com
He sets to with a scourer on my legs and feet.
From the guardian.co.uk
Aside from his poetry, which was a life-long obsession, he was in turn a thresher, bird-scarer, plough boy, pot scourer and gardener.
From the economist.com
More examples
Someone who cleanses by scouring
Someone who travels widely and energetically; "he was a scourer of the seven seas"
A tool used to scour. It is usually used to clean cookwares. It may be in the form of a mesh (ball) of wires or as a flat piece of a rough fabric; A person who scours
(SCOURERS) Riotous bucks, who amuse themselves with breaking windows, beating the watch, and assaulting every person they meet: called scouring the streets.
Worked in the textile industry, hand-washing wool using soap or urine.