highwayman in English

noun
1
a man, typically on horseback, who held up travelers at gunpoint in order to rob them.
Eighteenth century playwrights and novelists often made their hero a criminal, a highwayman or confidence trickster.
noun

Use "highwayman" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "highwayman" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "highwayman", or refer to the context using the word "highwayman" in the English Dictionary.

1. He could tell the highwayman was stone dead.

2. A highwayman robbed him of his money.

3. A highwayman robbed the traveler of his money.

4. I think your highwayman is a cunning and resourceful villain.

5. The highwayman came riding, up to the old inn - door.

6. 1792 – Highwayman Nicolas J. Pelletier becomes the first person executed by guillotine.

7. She had to defend herself against a highwayman with the stick.

8. 15 I think your highwayman is a cunning and resourceful villain.

9. The highwayman forced each of the travelers to kick over 20 pounds.

10. The highwayman, having cheated the law for years, hanged for £ 4 of horseflesh.

11. On to the Muskoka resort region for an overnight stay at the Highwayman Inn.

12. The choice traditionally presented by highwayman is supposed to have only one sensible answer.

13. The countryside was his enemy: uncouth heather and highwayman copses kept taking his jewel and hiding it.

14. The highwayman had assumed it was a lance, but now a curved blade sprang out and glittered blue along its edges.

15. 30 Clarke had already achieved fame as a law enforcer by tracking down and executing the famous dandy highwayman, Jack Rann.

16. Latin Babelicious chick with raven hair and blue eyes Tamiry dates with Hershey highwayman and enjoys getting her pretty face whitewashed.

17. Clarke had already achieved fame as a law enforcer by tracking down and executing the famous dandy highwayman(Sentencedict.com), Jack Rann.

18. The apparently gallant highwayman inspired a number of biographers and playwrights to add to his legend, including claims of alchemy, gambling, and much womanising.

19. Local lore has it that the hands belong to a convicted highwayman who would hold up carriage-travellers in the early nineteenth century.

20. 13 The village is said to have at least 12 spectres, including a highwayman, a phantom monk, the hanging body of a schoolmaster and a poltergeist in the local pub.

21. The village is said to have at least 12 spectres, including a highwayman, a phantom monk, the hanging body of a schoolmaster and a poltergeist in the local pub.

22. Peachum the receiver and informer who betrays the highwayman Macheath in John Gay's The Beggar's Opera (1728); his name comes from the informal verb peach ‘inform on’, a shortening of the archaic Appeach, ultimately from the French base of impeach