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Beggary   Listen
Beggary

noun
1.
A solicitation for money or food (especially in the street by an apparently penniless person).  Synonyms: begging, mendicancy.
2.
The state of being a beggar or mendicant.  Synonyms: mendicancy, mendicity.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Beggary" Quotes from Famous Books



... are mostly ignorant and superstitious. They are workers in the bogs, or day-laborers, and all think themselves very fortunate if they can obtain employment at wages which will keep them and their children from starvation. Beggary is very common everywhere, and is not considered a disgrace, except by the better ...
— Stories and Legends of Travel and History, for Children • Grace Greenwood

... Aulaire, only son of the Marquis, then a youth of seventeen years of age, and pursuing his studies in the seclusion of an old family seat in Vaucluse. He fled into Italy. In the meantime, his inheritance was confiscated; and the last representative of the race, reduced to exile and beggary, assumed another name. It were idle to attempt to map out his life through the years that followed. He wandered from land to land; lived none knew how; became a tutor, a miniature-painter, a volunteer at Naples ...
— In the Days of My Youth • Amelia Ann Blandford Edwards

... his miserable situation over and over again in his mind without avail. There seemed no way out of it; no way of obtaining the few pounds that would save him from homeless beggary and his splendid invention from being lost to him and the world, certainly for years, and perhaps ...
— The Angel of the Revolution - A Tale of the Coming Terror • George Griffith

... rats took up their abode in the farmer's house that it was impossible for him to defend himself against them. The rats gnawed everything in the house, and whatever was brought into it. In time the farmer was reduced to beggary, and ...
— Supplemental Nights, Volume 5 • Richard F. Burton

... flatterers into a paragon of generosity for waiving part of the penalties for offences which had not been committed. Ralegh's estate was, however, indebted yet more to Cecil. If he would not, or could not, secure justice for his old ally, Cecil had no desire to see him reduced to beggary. Whatever the cause, Ralegh undoubtedly suffered in purse less than his condemned fellows. Cobham's and Grey's vast patrimonies were wholly confiscated. They subsisted on the charity of the Crown. Markham was sent into exile so bare of means that he ...
— Sir Walter Ralegh - A Biography • William Stebbing


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