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brigand
[ brig-uhnd ]
noun
- a bandit, especially one of a band of robbers in mountain or forest regions.
Synonyms: cutthroat, desperado, highwayman, outlaw
brigand
/ ˈbrɪɡənd /
noun
- a bandit or plunderer, esp a member of a gang operating in mountainous areas
Derived Forms
- ˈbrigandage, noun
Other Words From
- brigand·age noun
- brigand·ish adjective
- brigand·ish·ly adverb
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of brigand1
Example Sentences
Men who had fled other camps and been set upon by brigands had been known to beg the nearest Ottoman official they could find to take them back.
The Spaniards, indeed, feigned to regard them only as a remnant of the rebels who had joined the pre-existing brigand bands.
This was the flourishing time of the notorious Fra Diavolo, who began as brigand and blossomed into a patriot.
In the East the brigand has had a freer scope, and has even founded kingdoms.
The patriot band attracts the brigand proper, who is not averse to continue his old courses under an honourable pretext.
A Kurdish brigand chief with a large banking account in England sounds a wildly impossible conception.
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