A pauper who lives by begging.
One who practices mendicancy and relies chiefly or exclusively on alms to survive.
A male member of a religious order that originally relied solely on alms.
1 Servants and masters mingle together, and even the mendicant is kindly received.
2 Those who envied this mendicant said that he belonged to the police.
3 O lady of the mendicant order, I cherish an affection for thee.
4 This kind of mendicant is distinctly rural, and belongs to old times.
5 At Sanam Luang he bought a kite from a mendicant kite salesman.
6 Before these, what a base mendicant is Memory with his leathern badge!
7 The plague ravaged Ephesus; I made them stone an old mendicant .
8 I dared to put off the mendicant - to resume my natural manner and character.
9 I did not wish him to come before them as a threadbare mendicant .
10 Thou art he that is adorned with the marks of the mendicant order.
11 It drags along, a lamentable workshop mendicant , from copy to copy.
12 CARMELITE, n. A mendicant friar of the order of Mount Carmel.
13 He had traversed the Indian conquests of Alexander, as a mendicant .
14 Gounsovski, in recognition, extended his hand to her like a mendicant .
15 He had no fear of these mendicant disciples of St. Francis.
16 The man who respects his wife does not turn her into a mendicant .
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Translations for mendicant