bandit

[ US /ˈbændət/ ]
[ UK /bˈændɪt/ ]
NOUN
  1. an armed thief who is (usually) a member of a band
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How To Use bandit In A Sentence

  • Specter, who is in a tough primary race in the Rust Belt state of Pennsylvania, said Chinese subsidies and what he called dumping are "a form of international banditry. The Seattle Times
  • In the dark, the Main Building feels like a place you'd get to after trekking through a bandit-ridden forest on an RPG. POPCO
  • The next morning, I turned away from the dazzling coast and took the road inland to bandit country. Times, Sunday Times
  • Jolo, about 600 miles south of Manila, is a refuge for armed gangs, bandits and pirates.
  • In one version the bandits and their boss join the imperial forces and from then on fight robbers and bandits in the name of law and order.
  • The grungy banditos had to escape Blythe, but they were afraid of getting pulled over on the way out of town.
  • Also, in my opinion, the use of that word, begining with SP and ending in a sound similar to the name of the masked mexican bandit, should be a finable offence. 50 Euro Fine for Torsonudismo
  • Will the prosecution remain as toothless as it used to be at the times of Tatarchev, who kept talking of catching all bandits in a sack, but in reality none ever reached prison?
  • The image was scanned from the magazine Studio CinéLive, and features Rapunzel herself (Moore) and “le bandit” Flynn Ryder (Levi). New Image from Disney’s RAPUNZEL – Collider.com
  • They can be seen as rough and gruff bandits of the road. The Sun
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