Easy. The suffix is "ar" = one who does.
Very similar suffixes are seen in words with German, French, or Latin roots.
German and Anglo-Saxon have thousands of words that end in "er", including archer, baker, engineer, fletcher, flier, grover, hatter, lawyer, maker, pfeiffer, runner, singer, teacher, teller, user, etc.
Ones with Latin roots end in "or" including aviator, doctor, governor, mayor, pastor, senator, sailor, and vendor.
Once with French roots end in "eur", including chauffeur, friseur, masseur, saboteur, and some more.
D.A.W.
The word beggar may be a noun (itinerant, panhandler) or verb (to impoverish).
There is no direct adjective formed by the present participle as there is for panhandling, but the past participle "beggared" might rarely be used to refer to an impoverished group or person.
The beggar is being laughed at.
The suffix "ar" can indicate someone who performs an action or is associated with a particular thing, such as in the word "scholar" meaning someone who studies or is knowledgeable in a particular subject.
The beggar is a woman, because if the beggar is not the woman's brother, but the beggar has the woman for a sister, then the beggar is a woman, the only characteristic not mentioned in the question. beggars can be women
a BEGGAR'S CANT is a beggar that can't do anything for work or for living
A beggar is a person who begs.
The Beggar was created in 1965.
She is female
it's not complete. it's supposed to be : " "A blind beggar had a brother who died. But the dead man's brother is not the blind beggar. What relation was the beggar to the brother who died?" The answer is 'bother and sister' ! :)
The beggar is given (something) by you.
The Beggar Queen was created in 1984.
Beggar Prince was created in 1996.
Beggar Prince happened in 2006.