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[ UK /ɹˈə‍ʊɡ/ ]
[ US /ˈɹoʊɡ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a deceitful and unreliable scoundrel

How To Use rogue In A Sentence

  • I barken back to the rogue Taken Howler, the dead unexpectedly alive and inimical. Shadow Games
  • He plays David as a charismatic rogue - someone the audience is supposed to recognize as a bit of a scoundrel, but like nevertheless.
  • The rogues ransack the place in search of a treasure map, offing the men and carting the women, including feisty Violet Miranda, onto a ship run by the dastardly but suave Captain Calico Jack.
  • First to unfold were the two 14-foot-wide drogue chutes, which oriented the craft and continued slowing it.
  • They say that simply flushing out rogue unleaded petrol is sufficient. The Sun
  • He was dressed in a worn tricorn, a dark homespun coat, knee-length breeches, dark stocking, and heavy brogue shoes.
  • He must turn rogue and villain; for as the saying is, Necessitas cogit ad turpia, poverty alone makes men thieves, rebels, murderers, traitors, assassins, because of poverty we have sinned, Anatomy of Melancholy
  • However, I would not hold your breath that the rogue parties will have a sudden fit of netiquette - after all, what's in it for them?
  • It was precision expectoration that accurately landed a deposit of froth about two feet from my Oxford brogues.
  • Roel Schouwenberg, senior researcher at Kaspersky Lab, says the rogue certificates have all the marks of an intelligence operation, but it isn't clear whether that is the case here.
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