hobo

ভবঘুরে লোক
definition
noun
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.
a homeless person; a tramp or vagrant.
translation of 'hobo'
যে মজুর ঘুরিয়া ঘুরিয়া কাজে খোঁজে
noun
ভবঘুরে লোক
example
Nobody had ever accused this 'hobo' of being lazy.
Anyway, yeah, being a straight-up rail-riding 'hobo' is really interesting, but not for me.
When we talked to that deranged 'hobo' in the park who looked kind of like Dr. Phil, you said you'd do anything to save our friendship.
C'mon, he's a movie star, not some random 'hobo' on the street!
I have a feeling I looked like a homeless 'hobo' that sleeps under anything she can find.
During my Mother's growing up days an old 'hobo' lived in a dugout in the vicinity of her little town.
I turned to see an unshaven, uncleaned, homeless 'hobo' .
Lauren laughed, ‘He was probably some 'hobo' on the streets before.’
So he dressed down, stopped shaving and tried to pass himself off as just another anonymous 'hobo' .
He knew it was probably just some 'hobo' , but it was still unnerving.
Mostly young, single, and male, these 'hobos' by necessity and choice hopped the rails in search of seasonal jobs and relief, using their wits, each other, and their labor as their primary means of survival.
Instead the poor guys ‘looked like 'hoboes' and lived like pigs.’
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.
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.
A few 'hobos' and bag ladies wearing multiple layers of dirty, mismatched clothing leaned against the wall adjacent to the bench.
Migration was not limited to the poor, of course, although existing studies of tramps and 'hoboes' present intriguing questions.
Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, Eleanor cared for a succession of 'hoboes' , vagabonds, and bums who called at the back door of the large house the family owned on Hamond Street in Chicago.
In the hard times of the 1930s, unemployed men and transient 'hobos' often took temporary refuge on the island, erecting small shantytowns of tents.
Credits: Google Translate