countable
count
common
concrete
wanderer, tramp, vagrant, homeless person, beggar
They live a vagabond life with no home.
إنهم يعيشون حياة المشرَّدين بلا منزل.
Be wary of the vagabonds in that corner of the city.
احذر من المشَرَّدين في تلك الزاوية من المدينة.
He had found her, a run away vagabond, on the side of the road.
وجدها مشَرّدةً هاربةً على جانب الطريق.
He is a writer who wrote about peasants, vagabonds, and beggars.
إنه كاتب كتب عن الفلاحين والمُشرَّدين والمتسولين.
We're vagabonds, traveling from one place to another.
نحن مُشرَّدين، ننتقل من مكانٍ إلى آخر.
Middle English (originally denoting a criminal): from Old French, or from Latin vagabundus, from vagari 'wander'.
stateless
I met a homeless person in the street.
قابلت شخصاً مشرّداً في الشارع.
He made his way back to his country homeless without anything.
عاد إلى بلده مشرَّداً بدون أي شيء.
For those homeless people and beggars in the streets, life was even more miserable.
إن الحياة أكثر بؤساً للأشخاص المشردين والمتسولين في الشوارع.
The streets were crowded with poor homeless people.
إن الشوارع مزدحمة بالأشخاص الفقراء والمشرّدين.
I feel very sad when I see homeless person.
أشعر بالحزن الشديد عندما أرى شخصاً مشرداً.
homeless dumping
homeless dumping
having no permanent abode," 1610s, from home (n.). Old English had hamleas, but the modern word probably is a new formation. As a noun meaning "homeless persons," by 1857