bindle stiff
See also: bindlestiff
English
Etymology
From bindle, a hobo’s sack.
Noun
bindle stiff (plural bindle stiffs)
- A hobo, misfit, criminal, wanderer, or drifting harvest worker.
- 1937, John Steinbeck, Of Mice and Men, Covici Friede:
- “So maybe you better jus’ scatter along now, ’cause Curley maybe ain’t gonna like his wife out in the barn with us ‘bindle stiffs.’ ”
- 1983, Clive Cussler, “Pacific Vortex!”, in Dirk Pitt Series, volume 1, Random House LLC, →ISBN, page 80:
- He felt like a toss-up between a bindle stiff and a skid row derelict.
Synonyms
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