afoot and lighthearted, divagation, errantry, gadding, inexertion, laziness, pererration, roam, shiftlessness, spring fever, vagabondia, wayfaring
Definitionn. the state of wandering from place to place
Last update: June 20, 2015
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The first reconstruction legislature met on the 16th of October 1865, and at once proceeded to enact stringent vagrancy laws and other measures against the freedmen; these laws the North 1 South Carolina ceded its western lands to the United States in 1787 and Georgia in 1802. [Please select]
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Slade, the spiritual medium, before a London magistrate, on a charge of vagrancy, suggests the rather trite remark that "history repeats itself." [Please select]
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The major cause for his lying as well as other delinquencies, particularly his vagrancy, is, of course, the mental traits peculiar to epilepsy. [Please select]
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(I had come out of Kingston Jail last on a vagrancy committal.) [Please select]
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A long list of disqualifying crimes was added, including wife-beating and conviction for vagrancy. [Please select]
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But the laws relating to apprenticeship, vagrancy, and enforced punitive employment turned out to be of greater practical importance. [Please select]
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The principal petty offenses were, it would seem, vagrancy and "enticing away" laborers or apprentices. [Please select]
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