[
US
/ˈfɛɫən/
]
[ UK /fˈɛlən/ ]
[ UK /fˈɛlən/ ]
NOUN
- someone who has committed a crime or has been legally convicted of a crime
- a purulent infection at the end of a finger or toe in the area surrounding the nail
How To Use felon In A Sentence
- One wrong thought may cause a lifelong regret.
- All three impulsively committed a felonious act that lead to their incarceration, i.e., attempted murder and kidnapping, attempted murder, and murder.
- She is charged with the task of ensuring the government's lifelong learning plans make sense to the public.
- Thus was born a lifelong interest in building houses by unconventional means, normally on his own or with one or two helpers. Times, Sunday Times
- Sure enough, this Heller language has served to protect a remarkable variety of federal gun restrictions challenged since Heller, including bans on gun possession by felons, domestic violence misdemeanants, and persons under restraining orders, bans on sawed-off shotguns and machine guns, laws restricting guns in school zones, post offices, and other public property, and others. Dennis A. Henigan: The Gun Issue Is Back in the Supreme Court: What Does It Mean?
- The bills are entirely regular, as impossible to impersonate as lifelong acquaintances. THE SAVAGE GIRL
- Back in Oxford, he sat on the City Council, and began his lifelong activity of prison visiting.
- Of this cruel knight and felonous you have avenged this country. The High History of the Holy Graal
- Was it a deviant thirst to find a lifelong fascination with such things? Times, Sunday Times
- Illicit prescription drug use is at a high level among the high-risk felony probationers who volunteered for this study.