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[ UK /d‍ʒˈe‍ɪlbɜːd/ ]
NOUN
  1. a criminal who has been jailed repeatedly

How To Use jailbird In A Sentence

  • To make the idea of jailbird-as-thespian even worse, I can tell you as someone who lives here that there is no possible way this does not turn into a media circus. Michael Conniff: Con Games: Aspen Jail Just a Stage for Charlie Sheen
  • Will Frances Liss divorce her jailbird husband to marry her tennis pro?
  • Chester, now about thirty years old, had been pardoned because of late evidence in his favour, when a five - year term for burglary was but one quarter served, but in his old father's eyes a jailbird was a jailbird, and Chester was still in some mysterious way to blame. The Story of Julia Page
  • Former hippie, former jailbird, former aficionado of crack cocaine, Felix Dennis built one of the most successful privately owned magazine empires in the world.
  • Judge Carrie Ann Inaba tells E! that the jailbird is her first choice for the next season. From Inside the Box
  • Not so long as storyliners have to come up with a way to reintroduce Tracey 'jailbird' Barlow. The Daily Record - Home
  • But she is set to have her world turned upside down by her jailbird dad 's return over the summer. The Sun
  • 'Tis a runaway gaolbird by the look of him for whom we have no sort of use here. The Fool Errant
  • Well that's interesting, because certainly for those of us who remember him in the '70s, he almost came across as an outlaw, as a jailbird, in fact many of his songs were about prison.
  • Well, the ex- ‘American Idol’ contestant almost went from songbird to jailbird.
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