different between roaming vs vagrant
roaming
English
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /??o?m??/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /????m??/
Verb
roaming
- present participle of roam
Noun
roaming (countable and uncountable, plural roamings)
- (countable) An instance of wandering.
- (uncountable, telecommunications) The ability to use a cell phone outside of its original registering zone.
- (uncountable, computing, telecommunications) The use of a network or service from different locations or devices.
- (uncountable, computing, operating system) Using the OS service of manipulating folders and documents from different PC devices by a registered user.
Translations
Anagrams
- moringa
Polish
Etymology
From English roaming.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?r?w.m?ink/
Noun
roaming m inan
- (computing, telecommunications) roaming (using a cell phone outside of its original registering zone)
Declension
Derived terms
- (adjective) roamingowy
Further reading
- roaming in Wielki s?ownik j?zyka polskiego, Instytut J?zyka Polskiego PAN
- roaming in Polish dictionaries at PWN
Spanish
Etymology
Borrowed from English roaming.
Noun
roaming m (plural roamings)
- roaming (telephony)
roaming From the web:
- what roaming means
- what roaming data means
- what roaming aggressiveness
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- what's roaming on a phone
- what's roaming on a cell phone
- what's roaming on my phone
- what's roaming bundle
vagrant
English
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /?ve????nt/
- Hyphenation: va?grant
Etymology 1
From Late Middle English vagraunt (“person without proper employment; person without a fixed abode, tramp, vagabond”) [and other forms], probably from Anglo-Norman vagarant, wakerant, waucrant (“vagrant”) [and other forms] and Old French walcrant, waucrant (“roaming, wandering”) [and other forms], perhaps influenced by Latin vag?r?, the present active infinitive of vagor (“to ramble, stroll about; to roam, rove, wander”). Old French walcrant is the present participle of vagrer, wacrer, walcrer (“to wander, wander about as a vagabond”) [and other forms], from Frankish *walkr?n (“to wander about”), the frequentative form of *walk?n (“to walk; to wander; to stomp, trample; to full (make cloth denser and firmer by soaking, beating and pressing)”), from Proto-Germanic *walk?n? (“to roll about, wallow; to full”), *walkan? (“to turn, wind; to toss; to roll, roll about; to wend; to walk; to wander; to trample; to full”), from Proto-Indo-European *walg-, *walk-, *welg?-, *welk-, *wolg- (“to turn, twist; to move”), ultimately from *welH- (“to turn; to wind”).
The English word is cognate with Latin valgus (“bandy-legged, bow-legged”), Middle Dutch walken (“to knead; to full”), Old English wealcan (“to roll”), ?ewealcan (“to go; to walk about”), Old High German walchan, walkan (“to move up and down; to press together; to full; to walk; to wander”), Old Norse valka (“to wander”). See further at walk.
Noun
vagrant (plural vagrants)
- (dated) A person who wanders from place to place; a nomad, a wanderer.
- Synonyms: itinerant, rover; see also Thesaurus:wanderer
- (specifically) A person without settled employment or habitation who supports himself or herself by begging or some dishonest means; a tramp, a vagabond.
- Synonyms: drifter, hobo; see also Thesaurus:vagabond
- Vagrans egista, a widely distributed Asian butterfly of the family Nymphalidae.
- (biology, especially ornithology) An animal, typically a bird, found outside its species' usual range.
Derived terms
Related terms
- vagary
- vagation
Translations
Etymology 2
From Middle English vagraunt, vagaraunt (“having no proper employment; having a tendency to go astray or wander; wayward”), from Anglo-Norman vagarant, wakerant, waucrant (“vagrant”) and Old French walcrant, waucrant (“roaming, wandering”); see further at etymology 1.
Adjective
vagrant (comparative more vagrant, superlative most vagrant)
- Wandering from place to place, particularly when without any settled employment or habitation.
- Synonyms: itinerant, nomadic, peripatetic, vagabond, (obsolete) vagrom, vague
- Of or pertaining to a vagabond or vagrant, or a person fond of wandering.
- (figuratively) Moving without a certain direction; roving, wandering; also, erratic, unsettled.
- Synonyms: inconstant, straggling, straying, vagabond, (obsolete) vagrom, vague, wayward
Translations
Notes
References
Further reading
- vagrancy on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
vagrant From the web:
- what vagrant means
- what vagrant is used for
- what vagrant does
- what vagrant provision does
- what vagrant means in spanish
- what vagrant boxes
- what's vagrant in english
- vagrant what does it mean
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