0 a person who has no home and usually no job, and who travels from place to place:
They live a vagabond life/existence, travelling around in a caravan.
They were not always distinguishable from vagabonds and ordinary travellers.
Workers were regarded as distinct from vagabonds and the state abolished truck for most industrial workers, instead of granting special dispensations for certain groups.
All those without the laissez-passer were designated ' vagabonds ', but the requirement of the laissez-passer did little to curtail illegal movement.
It became a separation of the industrious class, or the laboring poor, from the vagabonds or the permanently unemployed.
Protection was therefore extended to many industrial workers, who by virtue of their employment were not vagabonds and thus deserved legislative defense from truck.
There was an essentially moral and symbolic motive behind the punishment of vagabonds.
This was our sole reference point as we were vagabonds not tied economically to, or dependent on, any country.
As the economy industrialized, social ideology began to reclassify the less well off into the industrious poor and vagabonds.
中文繁体
流浪者, (通常指)無業遊民…
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流浪者, (通常指)无业游民…
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vagabundo…
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