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1 vagrants
Общая лексика: лица без постоянного местожительства -
2 vagrants
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3 vagrants
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4 vagrants
nმაწანწალები -
5 vagrants' disease
Медицина: болезнь бродяг (дерматоз, развивающийся при наличии вшивости) -
6 vagrants' disease
s.enfermedad de los vagabundos. -
7 political vagrants
Дипломатический термин: люди, не имеющие устойчивых политических взглядов, политически неустойчивые элементы -
8 supervision of vagrants
• irtolaisvalvonta -
9 political vagrants
• люди, не имеющие устойчивых политических взглядов -
10 political vagrants
политически неустойчивые элементы; люди, не имеющие устойчивых политических взглядов -
11 vagrant
------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] vagrant[English Plural] vagrants[Swahili Word] bedawi[Swahili Plural] mabedawi[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6an------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] vagrant[English Plural] vagrants[Swahili Word] bedui[Swahili Plural] mabedui[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 5/6an------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] vagrant[English Plural] vagrants[Swahili Word] hamiji[Swahili Plural] wahamiji[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 1/2[Derived Word] hama, hamaji------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] vagrant[English Plural] vagrants[Swahili Word] mgaagaa[Swahili Plural] wagaagaa[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 1/2[Derived Word] gaagaa------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] vagrant[English Plural] vagrants[Swahili Word] msikwao[Swahili Plural] wasikwao[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 1/2[Derived Word] si kwao PN------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] vagrant[English Plural] vagrants[Swahili Word] mtembezi[Swahili Plural] watembezi[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 1/2[Derived Language] Swahili[Derived Word] -tembea------------------------------------------------------------[English Word] vagrant[English Plural] vagrants[Swahili Word] mwasikwao[Swahili Plural] wasikwao[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 1/2[Swahili Definition] si + kwao------------------------------------------------------------ -
12 болезнь бродяг
Medicine: Greenhow's disease (дерматоз, развивающийся при вшивости), parasitic melanoderma (дерматоз, развивающийся при вшивости), vagabonds' disease (vagrants; дерматоз, развивающийся при вшивости), vagrants' disease (дерматоз, развивающийся при наличии вшивости), vagabond's disease (дерматоз, развивающийся при наличии вшивости и характеризующийся резким огрублением кожи с лихенизацией и экскориациями), vagrant’s disease (дерматоз, развивающийся при наличии вшивости и характеризующийся резким огрублением кожи с лихенизацией и экскориациями) -
13 indigente
adj.1 destitute, poor.2 indigent, disadvantaged, poor, destitute.f. & m.1 poor person.2 pauper, poor person, indigent, tramp.3 bag lady.* * *► adjetivo1 indigent, poverty-stricken1 poor person* * *1.ADJ destitute2.SMF destitute person* * *Iadjetivo (frml) destitute, indigent (frml)IImasculino y femenino (frml) indigent (frml)* * *= needy [needier -comp., neediest -sup.], poverty-stricken, impecunious, indigent, destitute, vagrant, bag lady, pauper, shopping-bag lady, bagwoman, bagman.Ex. By definition, these are benefits, often in cash, which the state has decided are required by various needy categories of its citizens.Ex. The British Museum Reading Room is filled with cranks, hacks, poverty-stricken scholars who cherish their hobby.Ex. Despite its impecunious state and lack of a home until 1928, the UK Library Association remained confident about the future of libraries and librarianship.Ex. These indigents, known to the public as tramps & skid row winos, are very visible & more likely to be arrested for drunkenness & other petty offenses than a person with a permanent home.Ex. The clarity of his drawings contrasts sharply with the total alienation in which he lived as a destitute mental patient with a diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia.Ex. This paper outlines the problems caused by vagrants who use public libraries as a refuge.Ex. A sample of New York City's vagrant females were interviewed in the main bag lady territory in Manhattan.Ex. Gavarni's illustrations of waifs, paupers, and beggars were later published separately, with captions added by the artist.Ex. Shopping-bag ladies do not overtly beg, but they do not refuse what is offered.Ex. I've always been afraid of somehow winding up as a bagwoman in the streets.Ex. His hand went to the pistol in his belt as he turned and found a ragged, filthy bagman looking up at him from beneath a blanket of newspapers.----* albergue para indigentes = poorhouse.* indigentes, los = destitute, the.* * *Iadjetivo (frml) destitute, indigent (frml)IImasculino y femenino (frml) indigent (frml)* * *= needy [needier -comp., neediest -sup.], poverty-stricken, impecunious, indigent, destitute, vagrant, bag lady, pauper, shopping-bag lady, bagwoman, bagman.Ex: By definition, these are benefits, often in cash, which the state has decided are required by various needy categories of its citizens.
Ex: The British Museum Reading Room is filled with cranks, hacks, poverty-stricken scholars who cherish their hobby.Ex: Despite its impecunious state and lack of a home until 1928, the UK Library Association remained confident about the future of libraries and librarianship.Ex: These indigents, known to the public as tramps & skid row winos, are very visible & more likely to be arrested for drunkenness & other petty offenses than a person with a permanent home.Ex: The clarity of his drawings contrasts sharply with the total alienation in which he lived as a destitute mental patient with a diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia.Ex: This paper outlines the problems caused by vagrants who use public libraries as a refuge.Ex: A sample of New York City's vagrant females were interviewed in the main bag lady territory in Manhattan.Ex: Gavarni's illustrations of waifs, paupers, and beggars were later published separately, with captions added by the artist.Ex: Shopping-bag ladies do not overtly beg, but they do not refuse what is offered.Ex: I've always been afraid of somehow winding up as a bagwoman in the streets.Ex: His hand went to the pistol in his belt as he turned and found a ragged, filthy bagman looking up at him from beneath a blanket of newspapers.* albergue para indigentes = poorhouse.* indigentes, los = destitute, the.* * *( frml)indigent ( frml)los indigentes the destitute* * *
indigente adj frml poverty-stricken
' indigente' also found in these entries:
English:
destitute
* * *♦ adjpoor, destitute♦ nmfpoor person;los indigentes the poor, the destitute* * *I adj destituteII m/f poor person;los indigentes the poor pl* * *indigente adj & nmf: indigent -
14 mendigo
adj.1 beggar.2 stingy, penny-pinching, miserly, skinflint.3 mean, perverse, evil, wicked.f. & m.beggar, panhandler, ragamuffin, tramp.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: mendigar.* * *► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 beggar* * *mendigo, -a1.SM / F beggar2.ADJ Méx * (=cobarde) yellow *, yellow-bellied ** * *- ga masculino, femenino beggar* * *= beggar, mendicant, vagrant, panhandler, bagman.Ex. These works presents a picture of China filled with devastation, turbulence, bandits, beggars and poverty.Ex. Mr Imray had libraries in his metropolitan ragged schools where mendicant readers took pleasure in reading.Ex. This paper outlines the problems caused by vagrants who use public libraries as a refuge.Ex. Through a survey conducted last year, the city found over 400 panhandlers on the streets, of whom nearly three in four were homeless.Ex. His hand went to the pistol in his belt as he turned and found a ragged, filthy bagman looking up at him from beneath a blanket of newspapers.----* mendigo que rebusca en la basura = dumpster rat.* * *- ga masculino, femenino beggar* * *= beggar, mendicant, vagrant, panhandler, bagman.Ex: These works presents a picture of China filled with devastation, turbulence, bandits, beggars and poverty.
Ex: Mr Imray had libraries in his metropolitan ragged schools where mendicant readers took pleasure in reading.Ex: This paper outlines the problems caused by vagrants who use public libraries as a refuge.Ex: Through a survey conducted last year, the city found over 400 panhandlers on the streets, of whom nearly three in four were homeless.Ex: His hand went to the pistol in his belt as he turned and found a ragged, filthy bagman looking up at him from beneath a blanket of newspapers.* mendigo que rebusca en la basura = dumpster rat.* * *mendigo -gamasculine, femininebeggar* * *
Del verbo mendigar: ( conjugate mendigar)
mendigo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
mendigó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
mendigar
mendigo
mendigar ( conjugate mendigar) verbo intransitivo
to beg
verbo transitivo [ mendigo] to beg for
mendigo◊ -ga sustantivo masculino, femenino
beggar
mendigar verbo transitivo & verbo intransitivo to beg
mendigo,-a sustantivo masculino y femenino beggar
' mendigo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
mendiga
- mendigar
- supuesto
English:
beggar
- distaste
- panhandler
* * *mendigo, -a nm,fbeggar* * *m, mendiga f beggar* * *mendigo, -ga nlimosnero: beggar* * *mendigo n beggar -
15 vagabundo
adj.vagabond, do-nothing, stray, footloose.m.vagabond, loafer, bum, do-nothing.* * *► adjetivo1 wandering, roving2 peyorativo vagrant► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 (trotamundos) wanderer, rover2 peyorativo vagrant, tramp, US hobo3 (sin casa) tramp, US hobo\perro vagabundo stray dog* * *(f. - vagabunda)nounrover, vagabond* * *vagabundo, -a1. ADJ1) (=errante) [persona] wandering, roving; [perro] stray2) (=pordiosero) vagabond frm; pey vagrant2. SM/ F1) (=persona errante) wanderer, rover2) (=pordiosero) vagabond frm, tramp, bum (EEUU); pey vagrant* * *I II- da masculino, femenino tramp, vagrant* * *= vagabond, transient, homeless man [homeless people, -pl.], tramp, vagrant, rover, errant, swagman, hobo [hoboes/hobos, -pl.], bagman.Ex. Some headings are vague and without scope notes to define them: ROBBERS AND OUTLAWS; CRIME AND CRIMINALS; ROGUES AND vagabonds.Ex. The librarian would at the end of such a search have a list of terms such as the following: emigres, evacuees, fugitives, immigration, migrants, migration, naturalisation, population transfers, transients.Ex. This article presents the issue of library use by homeless people in the form of two alternating fictional monologues, one in the mind of a homeless man, the other in the mind of a library official.Ex. These indigents, known to the public as tramps & skid row winos, are very visible & more likely to be arrested for drunkenness & other petty offenses than a person with a permanent home.Ex. This paper outlines the problems caused by vagrants who use public libraries as a refuge.Ex. Greed and fearlessness linked the Elizabethan sea rover, the 18th-century naval captain hungry for prize money, and the early-Victorian soldier for whom the storming of an Indian city offered the chance of booty.Ex. She was the type of kid who was always coming home with a new pet and we're not talking about your standard kitten in a shoebox or errant neighborhood mutt.Ex. After colonisation, swagmen wandered the countryside looking for work, looking for gold, running from something, seeking inspiration, or just living off the land.Ex. Chicago became the " Hobo Capital of America" during the late nineteenth century.Ex. His hand went to the pistol in his belt as he turned and found a ragged, filthy bagman looking up at him from beneath a blanket of newspapers.----* hacerse un vagabundo = take to + the road.* pensión para vagabundos = flophouse.* vagabundos = homeless people.* vagabundos, los = homeless, the.* * *I II- da masculino, femenino tramp, vagrant* * *= vagabond, transient, homeless man [homeless people, -pl.], tramp, vagrant, rover, errant, swagman, hobo [hoboes/hobos, -pl.], bagman.Ex: Some headings are vague and without scope notes to define them: ROBBERS AND OUTLAWS; CRIME AND CRIMINALS; ROGUES AND vagabonds.
Ex: The librarian would at the end of such a search have a list of terms such as the following: emigres, evacuees, fugitives, immigration, migrants, migration, naturalisation, population transfers, transients.Ex: This article presents the issue of library use by homeless people in the form of two alternating fictional monologues, one in the mind of a homeless man, the other in the mind of a library official.Ex: These indigents, known to the public as tramps & skid row winos, are very visible & more likely to be arrested for drunkenness & other petty offenses than a person with a permanent home.Ex: This paper outlines the problems caused by vagrants who use public libraries as a refuge.Ex: Greed and fearlessness linked the Elizabethan sea rover, the 18th-century naval captain hungry for prize money, and the early-Victorian soldier for whom the storming of an Indian city offered the chance of booty.Ex: She was the type of kid who was always coming home with a new pet and we're not talking about your standard kitten in a shoebox or errant neighborhood mutt.Ex: After colonisation, swagmen wandered the countryside looking for work, looking for gold, running from something, seeking inspiration, or just living off the land.Ex: Chicago became the " Hobo Capital of America" during the late nineteenth century.Ex: His hand went to the pistol in his belt as he turned and found a ragged, filthy bagman looking up at him from beneath a blanket of newspapers.* hacerse un vagabundo = take to + the road.* pensión para vagabundos = flophouse.* vagabundos = homeless people.* vagabundos, los = homeless, the.* * *‹perro› strayniños vagabundos street urchinsmasculine, feminine* * *
vagabundo
niños vagabundos street urchins
■ sustantivo masculino, femenino
tramp, vagrant
vagabundo,-a
I adj (sin rumbo cierto) wandering
(perro) stray dog
II m,f (errante) wanderer
(sin hogar) vagrant, tramp
' vagabundo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
vagabunda
- atorrante
English:
bum
- down-and-out
- hobo
- roaming
- runabout
- tramp
- vagrant
- vagabond
* * *vagabundo, -a♦ adj[persona] vagrant; [perro] stray♦ nm,f1. [sin domicilio] tramp, vagrant, US bum* * *I adj perro strayII m, vagabunda f hobo, Brtramp* * *vagabundo, -da adj1) errante: wandering2) : strayvagabundo, -da n: vagrant, bum, vagabond* * *vagabundo n tramp -
16 flotsam
ˈflɔtsəm сущ.
1) мор. плавающие или вынесенные на берег обломки( кораблекрушения, грузов и т.п.)
2) перен.;
коллект. бродяги;
бомжи;
беженцы, бездомные Syn: hoboes, vagrants ∙ flotsam and jetsam плавающий груз, смытый с корабля или выброшенный в море во время кораблекрушения плавающие обломки мусор, плавающий на воде свежая устричная икра > * and jetsam обломки кораблекрушения;
ненужные вещи, барахло, рвань;
бездомные бродяги, отребье flotsam выброшенный и плавающий на поверхности груз;
плавающие обломки ~ груз, выброшенный в море во время кораблекрушения ~ плавающий груз, смытый с корабля или выброшенный в море во время кораблекрушения ~ плавающий груз, смытый с корабля ~ свежая устричная икра ~ and jetsam бродяги;
безработные;
неприкаянные люди ~ and jetsam ненужные вещи ~ and jetsam обломки кораблекрушения jetsam: flotsam and ~ обломки кораблекрушения -
17 vagabonds' disease
Медицина: болезнь бродяг (vagrants; дерматоз, развивающийся при вшивости) -
18 лица без постоянного местожительства
General subject: vagrantsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > лица без постоянного местожительства
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19 люди, не имеющие устойчивых политических взглядов
Diplomatic term: political vagrantsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > люди, не имеющие устойчивых политических взглядов
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20 политически неустойчивые элементы
Diplomatic term: political vagrantsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > политически неустойчивые элементы
См. также в других словарях:
vagrants — ➡ homelessness * * * … Universalium
vagrants — va·grant || veɪgrÉ™nt adj. wandering about with no permanent home and no livelihood; random, changeable; growing without restraint (Botany) n. hobo, wanderer, person who does not have a permanent home … English contemporary dictionary
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faitours — Vagrants; vagabonds; idle persons … Ballentine's law dictionary
foiterers — Vagrants; vagabonds … Ballentine's law dictionary
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Vagrancy (people) — For other uses, see Vagrant. John Everett Millais The Blind Girl : vagrant musicians A vagrant is a person in poverty, who wanders from place to place without a home or regular employment or income. Contents … Wikipedia
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