Green’s Dictionary of Slang

scuffle v.

also skuffle

1. (US, orig. jazz) to survive with difficulty, to eke out one’s bare living, often through unpleasant, degrading methods.

[US] in N.E. Eliason Tarheel Talk (1956) 292: I scuffle hard but can not get along [...] I am not worth five dollars.
[US]F.E. Daniel Recollections of a Rebel Surgeon 262: Poor Leah, the cast-off, was scuffling for a living.
[US]Thurman & Rapp Harlem in Coll. Writings (2003) 322: father: Hello, son, how’s tricks? jasper: Pretty hard scufflin’.
[US]J. Peterkin Scarlet Sister Mary 165: If you nanny goat didn’ scuffle for rations, Unex wouldn’t have a Gawd’s drop o milk.
[US]Z.N. Hurston Jonah’s Gourd Vine (1995) 12: He mought put yuh tuh work. And if he do, son, you scuffle hard so’s he’ll work yuh reg’lar.
[US]D. Burley Orig. Hbk of Harlem Jive 109: The cats and the bats [...] skiffling and skuffling, trying to get under the wire.
[US]Mezzrow & Wolfe Really the Blues 208: I’m tired of scufflin’ and my feet are too long outa work.
[WI]R. Mais Hills Were Joyful Together (1966) 39: It had been a good day’s scuffling.
[US]L. Bruce How to Talk Dirty 20: I would like to believe that if I were still scuffling [...] I would be happy for him.
[WI]L. Barrett Rastafarians (1977) 88: Here the most industrious began a new life in what Kingstonians called ‘skuffling,’ which means making the best of life by any means possible.
[US]‘Hy Lit’ Hy Lit’s Unbelievable Dict. of Hip Words 35: skuffling – Broke; out of work; in short pants [...] trying to make ends meet.
[US]E. Torres Carlito’s Way 84: Here was Earl scuffling alongside me for twenty years.
[US]J.L. Gwaltney Drylongso 132: When I was a kid I had to scuffle and I did any kind of work.
[US](con. 1930s–60s) H. Huncke Guilty of Everything (1998) 240: I had never really been out scuffling on my own.
[US]Simon & Burns ‘Stray Rounds’ Wire ser. 2 ep. 9 [TV script] My boys ain’t gonna be scufflin’.
[US]S. Blass Pirate for Life 9: Dave [Giusti] came to us from St. Louis after scuffling through a mediocre 1969 season.

2. (US, orig. jazz) to dance.

[US]Louis Jordan ‘Saturday Night Fish Fry’ 🎵 It was rockin’! It was rockin’! / You never seen such scufflin’ and shufflin’ till the break of dawn!

3. (US black/W.I., also scuffle up) to collect, raise or obtain money or something desirable.

[US]Lil Johnson House Rent Scuffle‘’ lyrics] We got to scuffle the house rent tonight.
[WI]C. Thompson These My People 20: Someone ‘scuffled’ a discarded cigarette butt from the dry gutter.
[Aus]‘Salome’ in Mess Songs & Rhymes of the RAAF 25: Talk about a treat! we scuffled all the meat, / And drank all the beer in the boozer down the street.
[US]S. Allen Bop Fables 20: We’d better scuffle.
[US]D. Gregory Nigger 136: I scuffled up enough money that week to have the Underwoods’ phone turned back on.
[US](con. late 1940s) E. Thompson Tattoo (1977) 539: You just scuffle for pennies and buck the tide.
[WI]C. Hyatt When Me Was A Boy 8: The big boy them at the back a class an him was to bruk it up on the quiet an sen up the pieces to [...] everybody who was in on the sweetie scufflin’.
[UK]Guardian G2 24 Aug. 13: I got paid $100 a week so I didn’t have to scuffle for gigs any more.

In compounds

scuffle-hunter (n.) [they scuffle around, hunting for items to steal]

a dockside pilferer.

[UK]P. Colquhoun Police of the Metropolis 66: These (who are distinguished by the nick-name of Scuffle-hunters) prowl about the wharfs, quays and warehouses under pretence of asking employment as porters and labourers, but their chief object is to pillage and plunder whatever comes in their way.
[UK]P. Colquhoun Commerce and Police of the River Thames 232: The Scuffle-Hunters and Long-apron-Men upon the Wharfs, were equally unsuccessful at their attempts to obtain Pillage [...] by the viligance of the Guards.
[UK]G. Barrington New London Spy 129: Scuffle-hunters [...] come prepared with long aprons [...] to furnish them with the means of suddenly concealing what they pilfer.
[UK]W. Perry London Guide 104: A man might as well talk of the beauties of Grecian building in the reign of King Harry, as of the frauds committed by ‘scuffle-hunters, mudlarks, light horsemen and heavy horsemen upon the trade of the river Thames’.
[UK]G. Smeeton Doings in London 317: The mud-larks, scuffle-hunters, cope-men, &c. are now, like the others, nearly extinct.
[UK]Public Ledger 12 Nov. 3/3: All kinds of plundering on the river and its banks, on board shipping, barges, &c. Light horsemen, heavy horsemen, game watermen, lightermen, scuffle hunters, copemen, &c.