As a teenager myself, I would not call it loitering because when my friends and I "stand around idly without a purpose" or loiter as adults like to call it, we are usually discussing something be it getting jobs or not being able to find one, talking about school, relationships, listening to music, and just being together. So teenagers actually do not loiter. Our purpose is to be with our self-created family. If adults do not get that well they are stupid and can pretend they were never teenagers. I would say "loitering" is actually much healthier than im, text, or video chat. We just want face to face interactions with people we are not forced to see everyday be it classmates, teachers, parents, siblings. We like having a choice in what we do and if the group cannot come to a set decision on what is to be done that "loiter", we will.
The man did nothing but loiter the restaurant for money and free food. Loiter means to stand around or wait with no purpose.
The loiter is spoiled
probably to race (to loiter along the way) ...
Some words that rhyme with "loiter" include "destroyer," "deployer," and "employer."
Loiter is a verb.
The duration of Loiter Squad is 900.0 seconds.
No. To loiter is a verb. The noun form is the gerund loitering.
Loiter Squad was created on 2012-03-25.
After school many of the students loiter around the school gates talking.
The opposite of the verb to loiter (stand around) could be to proceed, or to hasten.
The boys were asked not to loiter around the coke machines in the hallway.
no.