itinerant in English

adjective
1
traveling from place to place.
itinerant traders
noun
1
a person who travels from place to place.
A party of Irish itinerants travelling in around 24 vehicles arrived at the Back Lane side of the factory on Sunday evening.

Use "itinerant" in a sentence

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

1. Itinerant ranching reached its peak in the 1880 s.

2. Some of the earliest retailers were itinerant peddlers.

3. Ambulant definition, moving from place to place; itinerant; shifting

4. I'm contemplating to an itinerant speech all over china.

5. He is now an itinerant ambassador for African causes.

6. He is starting itinerant performance all over the world.

7. I wondered that her prejudices did not stretch to itinerant Arabs.

8. The use of itinerant magistrates gradually increased, making prosecutions more convenient.

9. From boyhood he worked on local farms and became an itinerant Methodist preacher.

10. The itinerant returned with new resolves to agitate at the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting in 17

11. Carmichael’s father was an itinerant electrician, and his mother earned extra money for

12. This is Richard Muthama Peter, and he is an itinerant street photographer in Kibera.

13. It ended in the 1930s when another depression swelled the numbers of itinerant workers.

14. Are they canvassers, solicitors, peddlers, hawkers, itinerant merchants or transient vendors of merchandise or services?

15. Most local news directors are transients, moving from market to market like itinerant baseball players.

16. Which is a minor irritation for the itinerant tourist ... a daily nightmare for the local residents.

17. Handbills like this were distributed in advance of itinerant movie man Teddy Voye’s visits to smalltown New Brunswick.

18. In Scotland a Cadger is an itinerant peddler of fish.--James Maitland's American Slang Dictionary, 1891

19. Anchored family therapists take pride in having professional partnerships with local teachers, administrators, and itinerant staff

20. Improperly, Jehovah’s witnesses were classed as solicitors or itinerant merchants, rather than as proclaimers of the gospel.

21. Three or four centuries ago a group of itinerant actors had asked for the protection of some traveling Raika.

22. In these tiny houses you will find jugglers , magicians , acrobats , singers , bahurupiyas ( mime artistes ) and various itinerant performers .

23. Varley was one of a number of itinerant lay evangelists who emerged after the 1858-9 religious revival.

24. But times are hard, and bands of itinerant jugglers and acrobats have gone before them, picking the villages clean.

25. Acropolis Cinema is an itinerant screening series bringing classic and contemporary experimental, international, and undistributed films to Los Angeles.

26. Now it would command television crews, gangs of itinerant Press men and jolly serious ball by ball radio commentary.

27. Two years later the itinerant returned to attack Garden outright for allowing laxity and not promoting the preaching of grace.

28. Many Gypsy groups have preserved elements of their traditional culture, including an itinerant existence, tribal organization, and the Romany language.

29. In our grief we hover with the hummingbirds: We are spinning on a paused world gone over to itinerant echo.

30. Despite his obscure origins Warltire established himself as a fashionable itinerant lecturer on chemistry and a supplier of laboratory chemicals.

31. Lou Holtz is an itinerant minstrel, his hand out for a few more coins to sing his song at another stop.

32. The Chalice Quilt was made by slaves on a Texas plantation in 1860 in anticipation of a visit from an itinerant bishop.

33. Farmers fled to work as itinerant merchants; the amount of cultivated grain land shrank from 350 acres to less than 000.

34. I rented a room nearby, and to support myself, I started working as an itinerant craftsman, polishing copper pots and pans.

35. The pickers came every summer when the hops were ripe: families of itinerant workers who moved about the island like gypsies.

36. Nog is a mysterious itinerant who sells the narrator a foam-rubber octopus, and whose name he adopts as an alias.

37. I've been an itinerant singer , a circus rider, when I used to vault like Leotard, and dance on a rope like Blondin.

38. The island had responded particularly to the fervent missionary work of the itinerant Baptist preachers in the early years of the century. Sentencedict.com

39. “Mummy” is about an itinerant Egyptian embalmed mummy that prompts the young hero half-unknowingly to take on a museum-robbing mafia and outwit them Butterfingeredly

40. 21 Over the years, the itinerant lifestyle came to be part of the Gypsy culture, and though it is easy to romanticize (camaraderie! freedom!

41. The Ballets Russes (French: ) was an itinerant ballet company based in Paris that performed between 1909 and 1929 throughout Europe and on tours to North and South America

42. Recent Examples on the Web In France itinerant Coiffeurs made up 8-10% of the market, says Pierre André, who runs Wecasa, an app which arranges home cuts

43. Itinerant Kurdish teachers, carrying Blackboards on their backs, look for students in the hills and villages of Iran, near the Iraqi border during the Iran-Iraq war

44. Charlatan (plural Charlatans) A mountebank, someone who addresses crowds in the street; (especially), an itinerant seller of medicines or drugs1751, Tobias Smollett, The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, vol I, ch

45. The Conventual followers of Francis chose to minister in the heart of the city rather than in remote hermitages; they banded together in concentrated communities rather than wandering as itinerant preachers

46. In this page you can discover 23 synonyms, antonyms, idiomatic expressions, and related words for ambulatory, like: able to walk, walking, wandering, mobile, itinerant, steady, unchanging, stiff, ambulant, Ambulative and circuit-riding

47. I believe I'm honest, monsieur, but, to be outspoken, I've had several trades. I've been an itinerant singer, a circus-rider, when I used to vault like Leotard, and dance on a rope like Blondin.

48. Ahasuerus - balladeer - balladist - Bucoliast - itinerant - major poet - minor poet - modernist - peregrine - rhymester - serenader - sonneteer - straggler - symbolist - trovatore 10 letter words folk singer - librettist - parnassian - rhapsodist - troubadour 11 letter words ballad maker - minnesinger - pastoralist - peripatetic …

49. The Committee notes the various steps that have been taken to improve the situation of Travellers, including the Constitutional Council’s abrogation of some of the provisions of Act No. 69-3 of 3 January 1969 regarding itinerant activities and the regulations applicable to persons moving about in France who have no domicile or fixed abode.

50. Busker (n.) "itinerant entertainer," 1857, from busk (v.) "to offer goods for sale only in bars and taprooms," 1851 (in Mayhew), which is perhaps from busk "to cruise as a pirate," which was used in a figurative sense by 1841, in reference to people living shiftless and peripatetic lives; compare the nautical sense of busk (v.).