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Answer for the clue "Move round bed to corner a rat ", 8 letters:
turncoat

Alternative clues for the word turncoat

Word definitions for turncoat in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A traitor; one who turn against a previous affiliation or allegiance.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
A turncoat is a person who shifts allegiance from one loyalty or ideal to another, betraying or deserting an original cause by switching to the opposing side or party. In political and social history, this is distinct from being a traitor , as the switch ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Turncoat \Turn"coat`\, n. One who forsakes his party or his principles; a renegade; an apostate; a defector to the enemy. He is a turncoat, he was not true to his profession. --Bunyan.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1550s, from turn (v.) + coat (n.). The image is of one who attempts to hide the badge of his party or leader. The expression to turn one's coat "change principles or party" is recorded from 1560s.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a disloyal person who betrays or deserts his cause or religion or political party or friend etc. [syn: deserter , apostate , renegade , recreant , ratter ]

Usage examples of turncoat.

There were some, William Markland knew, as he regarded a crowd around the courthouse door, who were turncoats, adventuresome opportunists, and a few who were knaves, shaping their convictions to circumstance.

Roger Hartnell, still hobbling along with his cane, Gary Scholes, the frat boy turncoat.

Was China a soldier of fortune, a turncoat, or an independent warlord taking advantage f the Mozambican chaos for his own private ends?

These are only rumors, mind you, yet we must give them some credence, put forth as they are by the turncoats we keep in the midst of the Forces of Bad to observe the enemy and tell us what they are up to.

There was not a thing the city needed to learn from New York, and Richmonders would be damned before they followed any example set by the turncoat, carpetbagging city of Charlotte, which had a habit of stealing Richmond's banks and Fortune 500 companies.

Among the first of the turncoats was Loran Baird, a former naval officer, who for reasons known only to himself.

He seems to have access to every governmental e-mail address in the Commonwealth, which is one of the reasons I am sure he's an insider, a turncoat, and a troublemaker.

Sir Nigel Irvine thought the Nightingale was an embittered Russian turncoat called Anatoly Krivoi, right-hand man to the warmonger Vishnayev.

He himself would be greeted with a hefty degree of suspicion by Bahzell's fellow Horse Stealers, some of whom would regard him as a turncoat and traitor, and if he actually found himself forced to take up arms against other Bloody Swords—.

Lord Thagol had matters of his own to consider, and he didn’t care about the concerns of taverners or turncoats.

Even when her own loyalty to New Crobuzon was such an odd, unsystematic thing, she could not help thinking of Johannes as a kind of turncoat.