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nomad
[noh-mad]
noun
a member of a people or tribe that has no permanent abode but moves about from place to place, usually seasonally and often following a traditional route or circuit according to the state of the pasturage or food supply.
any wanderer; itinerant.
adjective
nomad
/ ˈnəʊmæd /
noun
a member of a people or tribe who move from place to place to find pasture and food
a person who continually moves from place to place; wanderer
Other Word Forms
- nomadism noun
- nonnomad noun
- seminomad noun
- seminomadism noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of nomad1
Word History and Origins
Origin of nomad1
Example Sentences
I went through a lot of difficult personal times and pushing midlife, I realized I’d been running like a cowboy, like a nomad.
Baldwin’s life as a transatlantic nomad begins in 1948, when he arrives in Paris after winning a scholarship to study there.
The other 60% are freelancers, many of whom are digital nomads, including those working for big ecommerce firms, and cyberspace writers.
The government has tentatively embraced foreign labour by launching a digital nomad visa and upskilling initiatives, but immigration remains politically fraught in the largely conservative country.
He described himself as a "spiritual nomad", exploring paths through yoga, Buddhism, and Christian mysticism, and learned from the Dalai Lama - whom he gifted a tartan-pouched hair clipper in 1988.
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