nomad

pengembara
definition
noun
The Touareg people are nomads who traveled through the desert.
a member of a people having no permanent abode, and who travel from place to place to find fresh pasture for their livestock.
translation of 'nomad'
noun
gelandangan,
pengembara
adjective
pengembara
example
the Magyars were a 'nomad' people of the steppes
Dolly was a 'nomad' who had finally taken root in Hawaii
How long will she remain a wanderer, a 'nomad' , with no place to go?
He was, in truth, a 'nomad' , a rootless wanderer, trailing from one country to another and one place to another, varying longer stays with many restless shorter travels, living alone except when visiting or journeying with friends.
Asher has never stayed in one place for long; he is a 'nomad' , and he remembers it well.
He's a 'nomad' , never staying in one place too long.
He remained a 'nomad' , a figure displaced by the historical tragedies of the last century, an émigré.
Devaji's family, like other Marwari 'nomads' , has travelled all over the country before reaching the city five years ago.
For centuries, there has been conflict between settled Black African farmers and Arab 'nomads' .
Baluchi 'nomads' live in tents made of palm matting stretched on poles.
Local 'nomads' reported the animals were sensitive to human presence and could be aggressive.
The Touareg people are 'nomads' who traveled through the desert.
These events have transformed the usually stable Karens into terrified 'nomads' and have turned many into stubborn rebel fighters.
White-winged Crossbills do not undertake a regular migration, but do wander 'nomadically' throughout their range and congregate in areas with large cone crops.
It is an ongoing dispute between Arab 'nomads' and African farmers which has recently been politicised.
Political tensions exist between sedentary peoples and 'nomads' .
Settling down, the Uzbeks traded their 'nomadism' for urban living and agriculture.
The 'nomads' bring their animals here to the town of InGall in Niger to feed on grass which is rich in salt minerals, believing that the practice fortifies the animals.
Recent investigations have challenged long-held views of 'nomadic' culture as purely transient, with little impact on the urban, sophisticated societies that emerged later.
Since the Kazaks were 'nomads' , during the 1800s it was possible for large numbers of Slavic settlers to move into and seize the land inhabited by the Kazaks.
Pastoral 'nomadism' was the traditional occupation of many Brahui: nomadic herders lived in tents and temporary camps, migrating with their herds in search of pasture.
Darfur, on the border with Chad and Central Africa, is home to some 80 tribes and ethnic groups divided between 'nomads' of Arab origin and farmers of African origin.
It shows a society that is blatantly discriminatory against Travellers and their culture, and particularly of that part of their culture that relates to 'nomadism' .
Over the past two decades, the traditional balance between largely Arab 'nomads' and mainly African farmers has broken down.
Actually, however, its roots go back deeper to an ethnic dispute and power struggle between African farmers and Arab 'nomads' over water and land rights.
Among 'nomads' , women make tents and have more freedom of movement.
The dress of these 'nomadic' herdsmen has changed and though you still see some in the black shaggy goats-hair capes, more and more have adopted western style dress.
Although they were originally 'nomads' , most Uzbeks have been settled for more than three hundred years.
His tent was hung with the paraphernalia of a lifetime's 'nomadism' - water jars, saddles, spears, swords, leather bags and an old rifle.
He can say he bought the car a few days before he was arrested, he's living 'nomadically' between San Diego and Modesto.
Credits: Google Translate