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Answer for the clue "Chaplin or Skelton persona ", 5 letters:
tramp

Alternative clues for the word tramp

Word definitions for tramp in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Tramp \Tramp\, n. A foot journey or excursion; as, to go on a tramp; a long tramp. --Blackie. A foot traveler; a tramper; often used in a bad sense for a vagrant or wandering vagabond. --Halliwell. The sound of the foot, or of feet, on the earth, as in ...

Usage examples of tramp.

With officers, sergeants, and corporals amplifying the simple command, the 47th North Carolina became a long gray serpent that wound its way out of the encampment, as if shedding a confining winter skin, and tramped north up the road toward Orange Court House.

The men of Ares were so very body-oriented, so very out-of-doorsy, so very much into tramping and swimming and climbing, and overall heartiness, so very much unaccustomed to sedentary pursuits that they did not consider the possibility of archival technology.

He tramped, begged and stole, lied or threatened as the case might warrant, and drank to besottedness whenever he got the chance.

I told how Mollie, Betty, Amy and Grace, four girls of Deepdale, a town in the heart of New York State, organized a little club for camping and tramping.

Torricelli nephew, such a snot, and Paternoster with his incredible nose and the tramps cooking dinner in the rain in the Place de la Contrescarpe.

Battersby piewipes was very like looking for a needle in a bundle of hay: besides it might have been found and taken by some tramp, or by a magpie of which there were many in the neighbourhood, so that after a week or ten days the search was discontinued, and the unpleasant fact had to be faced that Ernest must have another watch, another knife, and a small sum of pocket money.

Just at this moment a plashy tramp by the side of the bridge caught the sensitive ear of Ichabod.

Then followed various untimed periods, during which animal life rose by degrees from mollusk and jellyfish, by plesiosaurus and pterodactyl, horrible monsters, hundreds of feet in length, whose tramp crashed through the woods, or whose flight loaded the groaning air, to the dolphin and the whale in the sea, the horse and the lion on the land, and the eagle, the nightingale, and the bird of paradise in the air.

On the nineteenth of April, as she did every year, Lily pulled on her rubber boots and tramped through the woods to the further swamp to find the first polliwogs, which were never not there, on the nineteenth, freshly hatched into the bell-clear water.

A man who had missed the last train from Meiros and had been forced to tramp the ten miles between Meiros and Porth seems to have been the first to hear it.

The chief of the Tramps had a wonderful calculating eye in the observation of distances and the nature of the land, as he proved by his discovery of untried passes in the higher Alps, and he had no mercy for pursy followers.

I am one of the dispossessed, a sansculotte, a proletarian, or, in simpler phraseology addressed to your understanding, a tramp.

Probably some street tramp or shelterless American draft avoider trying to get out of the damp cold of night.

There was Borrow, who, as an old man, was tramping solitarily in the fields of Norfolk, as earlier he wandered alone in wild Wales or wilder Spain.

He marched with a tramp as steady as a galley drum to the sleeping chamber where she was confined, the blood rings of his waist chain jangling of victory, his sheathed spatha rocking in rhythm.