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Truant   /trˈuənt/   Listen
adjective
Truant  adj.  Wandering from business or duty; loitering; idle, and shirking duty; as, a truant boy. "While truant Jove, in infant pride, Played barefoot on Olympus' side."



noun
Truant  n.  One who stays away from business or any duty; especially, one who stays out of school without leave; an idler; a loiterer; a shirk. "I have a truant been to chivalry."
To play truant, to stray away; to loiter; especially, to stay out of school without leave.



verb
Truant  v. t.  To idle away; to waste. (R.) "I dare not be the author Of truanting the time."



Truant  v. i.  To idle away time; to loiter, or wander; to play the truant. "By this means they lost their time and truanted on the fundamental grounds of saving knowledge."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Truant" Quotes from Famous Books



... accept as some consolation until he found that it was stereotyped. Within a few hours it was despatched to another firm of publishers, taken at random from the advertisement columns of the Times. An hour or two afterwards Alfred arrived, with no label around his neck, but a veritable truant. Of the two he was the more self-possessed as ...
— The Double Life Of Mr. Alfred Burton • E. Phillips Oppenheim

... guns, the common people came out along the road with fowling-pieces and pitchforks, in hopes to catch the truant. The gendarmes seemed very anxious to be on the look-out for him too. The price of a deserter was fifty crowns to those who brought ...
— Barry Lyndon • William Makepeace Thackeray

... occurred to either of us that his jacket was out at elbows, or that our mutual funds came altogether from my pocket. It was enough for us that we sat on the same school-bench, conned our tasks from the same primer, fought each other's battles, screened each other's faults, fished, nutted, played truant, robbed orchards and birds' nests together, and spent every half-hour, authorised or stolen, in each other's society. It was a happy time; but it could not go on for ever. My father, being prosperous, resolved to put me forward in the world. I must know ...
— Mugby Junction • Charles Dickens

... company paraded generally in some such terms as these, which were uttered with that sort of meekness that a native of the island of our forefathers is apt to assume when he condescends to praise the customs or character of her truant progeny: ...
— The Pioneers • James Fenimore Cooper

... like two poor harmless women, who Of goblins, but still more of men afraid, Had thought one man might be deterred by two, And therefore side by side were gently laid, Until the hours of absence should run through, And truant husband should return, and say, "My dear,—I was the first who ...
— The Works of Lord Byron, Volume 6 • Lord Byron


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