vagabond

  • 21Vagabond 7 — infobox television show name = The Vagabond 7 caption = The logo of The Vagabond 7 (from opening credits) format = Reality TV/Documentary/College Drama runtime = 15 30 Minutes (various clips available online) creator = Jon Bell Stephen Gebhardt… …

    Wikipedia

  • 22Vagabond — El término Vagabond (vagabundo, en inglés) puede hacer referencia a: The Vagabond, película de Charlie Chaplin de 1916. El manga Vagabond. Vagabond, grupo de rock danés. Esta página de desambiguación cataloga artículos relacionados con el mismo… …

    Wikipedia Español

  • 23VAGABOND — ONDE. adj. Qui erre çà et là. Homme vagabond. Femme vagabonde.   Il s emploie figurément, et signifie, Désordonné, déréglé. Esprit vagabond. Tête vagabonde. Imagination vagabonde. Poétiq., Course vagabonde.   Il est aussi substantif ; et alors il …

    Dictionnaire de l'Academie Francaise, 7eme edition (1835)

  • 24vagabond — I. adjective Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French vacabund, from Late Latin vagabundus, from Latin vagari to wander Date: 15th century 1. moving from place to place without a fixed home ; wandering 2. a. of, relating to, or characteristic …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 25vagabond — [15] A vagabond is etymologically a ‘wanderer’. The word comes via Old French vagabond from Latin vagābundus, which was derived from vagārī ‘wander’ (source also of English termagant, vagary [16], and vagrant [15]). And vagārī in turn was based… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 26vagabond — UK [ˈvæɡəbɒnd] / US [ˈvæɡəˌbɑnd] noun [countable] Word forms vagabond : singular vagabond plural vagabonds old fashioned someone with no home or job who travels from place to place …

    English dictionary

  • 27vagabond — vag•a•bond [[t]ˈvæg əˌbɒnd[/t]] adj. 1) wandering from place to place without any settled home; nomadic 2) leading an unsettled or carefree life 3) disreputable; worthless; shiftless 4) of, pertaining to, or characteristic of a vagabond 5) having …

    From formal English to slang

  • 28vagabond — /ˈvægəbɒnd / (say vaguhbond) adjective 1. wandering from place to place without settled habitation; nomadic. 2. leading an irregular or disreputable life. 3. good for nothing; useless. 4. of or relating to a vagabond or vagrant: vagabond habits.… …

  • 29vagabond — [15] A vagabond is etymologically a ‘wanderer’. The word comes via Old French vagabond from Latin vagābundus, which was derived from vagārī ‘wander’ (source also of English termagant, vagary [16], and vagrant [15]). And vagārī in turn was based… …

    Word origins

  • 30vagabond — n., adj., & v. n. 1 a wanderer or vagrant, esp. an idle one. 2 colloq. a scamp or rascal. adj. having no fixed habitation; wandering. v.intr. wander about as a vagabond. Derivatives: vagabondage n. Etymology: ME f. OF vagabond or L vagabundus f.… …

    Useful english dictionary