vagrant|vagrants in English
noun
['va·grant || 'veɪgrənt]
hobo, wanderer, person who does not have a permanent home
Use "vagrant|vagrants" in a sentence
1. He's just a vagrant, baby.
2. A vagrant is everywhere at home.
3. Of vagrant dwellers in the houseless woods.
4. Presently a vagrant poodle came idling along.
5. The town has shelters and food handouts for vagrants.
6. It is a rare vagrant to Australia.
7. The vagrant had to beg for money.
8. We met a band of vagrant beggars there.
9. 14 Presently a vagrant poodle came idling along.
10. The new law Banished vagrants from the train station.
11. Lavant plays a vagrant waif, Binoche a runaway painter.
12. The moon glows like phosphorus on the vagrant waters.
13. Pretty long time to chat with a vagrant.
14. Consequently, they became violent vagrants and scoffers at anything religious.
15. Spring flowers residual cardiac deficiencies go, how autumn vagrant hearts?
16. I told you to act like a drunk vagrant imbecile.
17. Vagrant in the province is popular , with a Sang persuade farmers.
18. Then a smile here. Shasha. like a child. Youshi a vagrant woman.
19. A vagrant current - an underwater breeze thick with plankton - passed between them.
20. 28 He who has no home is vagrant; He who has two homes is dissolute.
21. Bindlestiffs documents their struggles along the way as they surrender their virginities to vagrants, prostitutes, and crack fiends
22. Some of these were vagrant children, others victims of crime required as witnesses.
23. He who has no home is vagrant; He who has two homes is dissolute.
24. He who has no home is a vagrant; he who has two homes is dissolute.
25. Bindlestiffs documents their struggles along the way as they surrender their virginities to vagrants, prostitutes, and crack fiends