gypsy

[ UK /d‍ʒˈɪpsi/ ]
[ US /ˈdʒɪpsi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a laborer who moves from place to place as demanded by employment
    itinerant traders
  2. a person who resembles a Gypsy in leading an unconventional, nomadic way of life
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How To Use gypsy In A Sentence

  • Not sure I can visualise the little carts – but the multitude of vibrant flowers described with intense joy opened a triumphal way to the vision of that extraordinary gypsy lady whose beauty and style impressed you so much. Gens du voyage - French Word-A-Day
  • It looks at some appalling racial attacks, including a skinhead raid last June on a Gypsy camp near Naples.
  • They're the cruddy ones no one wants, not the spectacular, awesome ones with fairy wings and gypsy stallions with big manes," she says. Virtual Products, Real Profits
  • Gypsy moth egg hatch occurs at about the time of budburst of red and black oaks.
  • Michael Caine is also believed to be born of a Romanichal (Gypsy) family. AskMen.com - HOME PAGE
  • Desperate to hold on to her beloved son, Yvonne turns to her sister Leonie (Eileen Arkins), the bastion of rationality in this "raggle-taggle gypsy" family. Unhappy In Their Own Way
  • They were both dressed so that it was easy to mark them down as gypsy kin, their faded but bright clothes easy to spot amongst the normal gray drab of the peasants.
  • I had my fortune told by Gypsy Rose at the fair.
  • Henley Compact Offices are quirky sheds with curved roofs redolent of gypsy caravans.
  • It's why I have no difficulty with Carmen: even if I was not free, I understood her because I have a gypsy, nomadic side.
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