Citations:scrape


 * 1813 — Jane Austen. Pride and Prejudice.
 * "And remember that I have not much reason for supposing it to be Bingley. What he told me was merely this: that he congratulated himself on having lately saved a friend from the inconveniences of a most imprudent marriage, but without mentioning names or any other particulars, and I only suspected it to be Bingley from believing him the kind of young man to get into a scrape of that sort, and from knowing them to have been together the whole of last summer."


 * 2001, Carolyn Cooke, The Bostons, Houghton Mifflin Books, ISBN 0618017682, page 172–173,
 * He could hear deer moo in the woods, smell their musk, spot a scrape in a birch tree twenty feet away.