gypsy

జిప్సీ
definition
noun
But then, with the growing interest in gypsies, and in fortune-telling, many gypsies stopped travelling to become showmen.
a member of a traveling people with dark skin and hair who speak Romany and traditionally live by seasonal work, itinerant trade, and fortune-telling. Gypsies are now found mostly in Europe, parts of North Africa, and North America, but are believed to have originated in South Asia.
Depending upon the circumstances, a gypsy may retain his nomadic habit of life even though he is not travelling for the time being.
a nomadic or free-spirited person.
adjective
gypsy trucking firms
(of a business or business person) nonunion or unlicensed.
translation of 'gypsy'
ఐరోపా, ఉత్తర అమెరికాలలో సంచరించే ఒక సంచార జాతికి చెందిన వ్యక్తి
example
He had a cardiac arrest after speaking at a rally for the 'gypsy' and traveler community in Basildon, Essex.
Depending upon the circumstances, a 'gypsy' may retain his nomadic habit of life even though he is not travelling for the time being.
It's why I have no difficulty with Carmen: even if I was not free, I understood her because I have a 'gypsy' , nomadic side.
why should she choose to wander the world with a penniless 'gypsy' like me?
They were a gift given to him by a traveling 'gypsy' when he visited his father's castle.
The focus, to date, has centred on the usual political punch bags - asylum seekers, travellers and 'gypsies' .
He was a political and social activist who devoted twenty years of his life to regaining the rights of 'gypsies' and became a member of the gypsy community.
What results is a continent of 'gypsyish' blues, punctuated by eclectic folk influences.
The 56 itinerants, who say they are traditional Romany 'gipsies' , bought a three-acre field.
If the skirt is more casual or 'gypsyish' , then flats are definitely the way to go.
As a Briton, I am ashamed of the way we treat 'gypsies' and travellers.
He blew a 'gypsyish' tangle of dark hair from his eyes and picked up his fag from where it was perched.
The long skirt billowed out from the cool breeze that wafted through the trees and down the path the 'gypsies' were traveling upon.
Well these visions unfold in front of me like a play put on by a traveling band of vagabond 'gypsies' .
He felt a certain sense of dread slowly creep over him as he watched her move to sit with another group of the nomadic 'gypsies' .
Others believe that the wandering 'gypsies' brought the tarot with them from India via the middle east.
He's a good actor but where are the dark, brooding, 'gypsyish' good looks?
She's the boarding school beauty famed for her 'gypsyish' looks.
From its enigmatic double-stopped opening, her tone was rich and chocolatey, with a dark, somewhat reedy or woody quality that had a little Jascha coloring, something 'gypsyish' , in it.
But then, with the growing interest in gypsies, and in fortune-telling, many 'gypsies' stopped travelling to become showmen.
General interest in the practice of disposing of the dead by cremation, which was already established amongst groups such as 'gypsies' who believed that the dead and their worldly goods should be burned, grew in the 19th cent.
Many Romany 'gypsies' and Irish travellers have since been unable to find suitable sites and have occupied land without planning permission.
Romania's new minorities included substantial communities of Ukrainians, Bulgarians, 'gypsies' , Germans, Hungarians, Tartars, Turks, and Jews.
Their 'gypsyish' zestfulness is worlds away from the strictly commercial glamour of the world of pop music: but their own glamour is all the more potent since it is the product of personality rather than publicity.
The band is influenced by Balkan 'gypsyish' sounds.
There was a small section in the museum to talk about other groups who were persecuted, including gay men, 'gypsies' , trade unionists and communists.
From his 'gypsyish' complexion, the boy was thought to be Welsh.
Ten percent of the population of the new member states are Roma 'gypsies' , who have a long history of marginalisation and persecution.
Presumably, the itinerant musicians and 'gypsies' carried this instrument in their wanderings across the continents of Asia and Europe, giving rise to a variety of instruments that are similar in nature.
The village was small and away from any other, larger villages or towns, so the only travellers it saw where 'gypsies' and a few wide-ranging traders.
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