The little tramps probably crack on to 31-year-olds all the time at their local suburban blue light disco. |
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The pair of alcoholic tramps started traveling together near Kansas City in 1998 and eventually made their way to Minneapolis. |
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But then tramps and vagrants manage pretty well without any of those, although one couldn't say most look happy about it. |
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Migration was not limited to the poor, of course, although existing studies of tramps and hoboes present intriguing questions. |
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Of course he was in exile and did have a great affinity for those kinds of characters, for tramps and vagrants and displaced, placeless people. |
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Vagrants, tramps and casuals were strictly separated from the resident pauper inmates housed in the gothic splendour of the Main Workhouse. |
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The homeless are often stereotyped as being tramps or junkies who litter shop doorways. |
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The group has 400 vessels comprising oil tankers, tramps, passenger ships, container vessels and special cargo ships. |
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Brassens would also write numerous songs about society's underclass, peopling his lyrics with tramps and prostitutes. |
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My search for tramps has taken a side trip into terra incognita. |
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A solitary singer tramps through a winter landscape, seeing in the frozen streams and bare trees a reflection of his own loneliness and desolation. |
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The camps were destroyed systematically and the activity of tramps belittled. |
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They used to stroll the streets at night, always with a couple of minutes and a kind word to spare for the tramps on the Seine embankments. |
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In this category fall some of the adaptive activities of psychotics, autists, pariahs, outcasts, vagrants, vagabonds, tramps, chronic drunkards and drug addicts. |
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Headway has also been made on getting the homeless off the streets as the amount of tramps and beggars seems minimal in comparison to major UK cities. |
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Deserters from foreign armies, prisoners of war, criminals, vagabonds, tramps, and people whom the crimps had entrapped by fraud and violence were the bulk of the regiments. |
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The first batch, comprising of 14 children, were handed over by the district administration as part of their drive to clear the town of beggars and tramps. |
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I kipped in a box with all the tramps, and I was the Tinkerbell to their Lost Boys. |
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Glasses of wine, old men on stools and smoking pipes are substituted by cans of lager, tramps on park benches and a rollie. |
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There's a small amount of cannon fodder in terms of runaways, drug addicts, prostitutes and tramps that are used. |
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As I continued round the green I saw that these sheets were stuck up everywhere, on hoardings, on pillar boxes, on passing dogs, on to the faces of tramps. |
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A simple man, clothed if not in rags then certainly not far from it, he tramps his way along the street, feet keeping time to the music, intent on his playing. |
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It's a Sunday night, and homebound tramps are everywhere, in the train-station bar, sleeping on benches, strumming guitars, or nuzzling with sweethearts. |
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Nonetheless, hobos, like tramps, acquired a reputation for their carefree way of life, their predilection for booze, and a canon of whimsical folk songs and stories. |
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Cohen includes a category of songs about hoboes, tramps, vagabonds, etc. who populated the boxcars and rail-yards in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century. |
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Since this is supposed to be a no-strings attached arrangement, I have no concern whatsoever when hussies and tramps strip him naked and devour him with their eyes. |
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They served their country in rusty old tramps, and in highly flammable tankers or in freighters loaded with ammunition. |
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Among many visits during the stay in Japan was one to a small group of religious brothers who live among tramps, in a very poor house. |
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Garson is the imaginary story of the Grand-Bazar with its stallholders, its tramps, and its former big shots who used to have municipal protection. |
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Well you'd better think of something because middle-aged tramps aren't cute, they're pathetic. |
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They become more or less tramps in a short time. |
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They sometimes sailed in rusty old tramps, but just as often in highly-flammable tankers or in freighters loaded with ammunition and other dangerous cargoes. |
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The tramps scarpered, the street-traders pushing prams scarpered, half of Dublin scarpered as if they all had something to hide. |
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Susan still persisted in thinking that poets and tramps were tarred with the same brush. |
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The story focuses on tramps Vladimir and Estragon who are waiting for someone. |
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All of the things that happened around Montreal, the ice carnivals, the snowshoe tramps, that was part of being Canadian, and I think that Notman certainly contributed to the sense of winter as a bracing time. |
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But the reality is that Gypsies are a real group, a real ethnicity, and comments labelling them as tramps, thieves, lawless to whatever extent, baby-stealers and so on, are stereotypes, and clearly unduly negative. |
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Imagine the following scenario: two tramps beside a leafless tree are killing time as best they can, waiting for the arrival of Godot, with whom they believe they have an appointment. |
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Near to the entrance were the casual wards for tramps and vagrants and the relieving rooms, where paupers were housed until they had been examined by a medical officer. |
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Tramps who once scorned communism began to cast a yearning eye toward Western-style yuppiedom. |
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Prior to that, my boxing experience had been limited to a few jaunts in the 1970s from the dance floor at Tramps or the Playboy Club, where I was a bunny girl. |
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Mr Wilkes disappeared on June 22 after becoming separated from the stag party at Tramps nightclub in Worcester city centre. |
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In 1880, Maitland was introduced by Frederick Pollock, who had been to Eton and Cambridge with him, to the Sunday Tramps, a walking club founded by Leslie Stephen. |
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