Use "vagabonds" in a sentence

1. 3 The vagabonds were banished from the train station.

2. In this context, Bohemians can be wanderers, adventurers, or vagabonds

3. I'll send an answer back to the vagabonds through their messenger.

4. Argot (plural Argots) A secret language or conventional slang peculiar to thieves, tramps and vagabonds

5. Synonyms for Bindlestiffs include homeless, beggars, derelicts, down-and-outs, drifters, itinerants, migrants, tramps, transients and vagabonds

6. He transformed himself from a dapper academician artist into a sort of prince of vagabonds.

7. Fellow academicians, 2500 years ago, a band of hardy vagabonds arrived on this barren, rough-hewn planet.

8. These orphans and vagabonds were just one group among many that were virtually lawless in the disturbed countryside.

9. 1 Description 2 Role 3 Attributes 4 Recruitment Acolytes were Hylian homeless, vagabonds or otherwise lower class individuals that ended up with little fortune in the Kingdom's society

10. Amazon.com: Rogues, Vagabonds, and Sturdy Beggars: A New Gallery of Tudor and Early Stuart Rogue Literature Exposing the Lives, Times, and Cozening Tricks of the Elizabethan Underworld (9780870237188): Kinney, Arthur, Lawrence, John: Books

11. [Verse 2] This is gospel for the vagabonds Ne'er-do-wells, insufferable bastards Confessing their Apostasies Led away by imperfect impostors [Refrain] (Woah, oh-oh, oh-oh, oh-oh, oh-oh) Oh-oh-woah

12. A new class of fix-up vagabonds has emerged to move into houses, fix them up, sell them for a substantial tax-free capital gain, and move on to a more expensive house to repeat the process.

13. Normal, socialized people always lay the table, vagabonds, male and female, never eat, they drift, they amble without a destination, without an aim until, perhaps, they fall sick because they have never provided, as ants do, for the security of material reality.

14. As nouns the difference between Argot and cant is that Argot is a secret language or conventional slang peculiar to thieves, tramps and vagabonds while cant is (countable) an Argot, the jargon of a particular class or subgroup or cant can be (obsolete) corner, niche

15. (57) Similarly, while applied to generally miscreant persons who 'fyght, chide, disquiet, brawle or scolde wt ther neighbors', rather than specifically to vagabonds or beggars, the secondary punishment of whipping was taken verbatim from the 1531 Act: 'ther to be tied to thend of a Carte naked and to be Beten wt whippes through out thesame market Towne or other place tyll his or her body be blody by …