0 a person who has to work hard at boring and unpleasant tasks and who is not respected by other people :
He said that they were all around him, that he was worthless, a drudge in the home, and had not a penny piece.
It is not the reality of the daily, the weekly, drudge of shopping.
We intend to provide for a case that often happens of parents who have a defective child and who use that child as a drudge.
They have been the drudges of industry for too long.
That is all these people are asking for, the chance to drudge and the chance to earn their bread.
They are often little drudges, entirely at the mercy of those who have paid for them.
I am always pleased to see someone who drudges getting a little pleasure out of life.
She has been in a factory and does not like to become a maid of all work, a drudge in a small household.