[ US /ˈɫɔˌbɹeɪkɝ/ ]
[ UK /lˈɔːbɹe‍ɪkɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who violates the law
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How To Use lawbreaker In A Sentence

  • I mean, your critics are saying you can't be lawmakers and lawbreakers at the same time.
  • A policeman has the authority to arrest lawbreakers.
  • And while lawbreakers should be prosecuted, there will be unintended consequences.
  • Instead it is argued that the unusual social profile of lawbreakers did reflect social reality.
  • A policeman has the authority to arrest lawbreakers.
  • Add to this the urgency with which many Americans demand that we look the other way as thousands of Mexicans cross our borders illegally each day, and the insistency with which they urge Pelosi, Kennedy, and Bush to grant amnesty to those millions of lawbreakers already here, without thought being given to the tens of millions more who will then follow in their footsteps. From On High
  • Most people regard them as thieves of taxpayers' money and lawbreakers not lawmakers as politicians have recently been implicated in various corruption cases.
  • The essential arguments are that nothing in the policy excludes these cases and that to exclude them puts lawbreakers in a better position than entrants who declare themselves.
  • The writer Michael Kinsley, sardonically noting the extent to which press organizations that used to invite prominent government officials to be their guests at Washington's ritual spring press banquets now prize guests whose fame rests on their notoriety as popsies, lawbreakers and figures of general unsavoriness, sums up the mindless, annual post-banquet boast as: "We had Hitler at our table! The Art Of The Snub
  • But arresting lawbreakers and bringing them to trial in Australian courts is one thing.
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