Dictionary
are vagrant
noun
A person without a home; a wanderer.
Exact(3)
Whenever they meet on the show, their exchanges are vagrant, ethereal, unhurried, as if they were conversing in a limbo borrowed from a play by Samuel Beckett.
Basically, the most popular people in Britain are vagrant Thalidomide victims.
A few of the species recorded from this region do not have resident populations in the area or in the entire TPE, but are vagrant species that reside in the Peruvian or Galapagos provinces.
Similar(57)
They are vagrants to the Faroe Islands, particularly in the winter and spring, and occasionally to Iceland.
The pterosaurs, which also included Pterodactylus, were common enough that it is unlikely that the specimens found are vagrants from the larger islands 50 km to the north.
A prime example is Vagrant's rock band Dashboard Confessional.
Mr. Maier's was a beautiful show and as direct as Alexander McQueen's was vagrant, and also lyrical.
Sperm whales are considered to be vagrant or absent in the waters surrounding the stranding place, and particularly in the Central and Northern areas of the Adriatic Sea, where the habitat is not proper to this deep-diving species [13].
"Before, men who lived on the streets were vagrants, people adrift or drug addicts," he said.
A few species, Smooth Hammerhead and Frilled Shark may be vagrants, occurring infrequently off the British coast, with their main distribution ranges being outside British waters.
Indian adults accused of being vagrants without steady employment, or taken as captives of war, could be apprenticed for 10-year terms.
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