The word peasant comes from a Latin word pagus, which means countryside. The word pagan comes from the same source, and originally the two were pretty much the same word, meaning a member of the country folk.
In a word? Lousy
Yes, his family wasn't a rich family in Austria.
The English surname Bond is a status name for a peasant farmer. From the Middle English word bonde, and the Old Norse word bóndi. The status of the peasant farmer fluctuated considerably during the Middle Ages. Among Germanic peoples, the term came to signify a farmer bound by loyalty to a lord. This developed the sense of a free landholder as opposed to a serf. In England after the Norman Conquest the word sank in status and became associated with the notion of bound servitude.
someone thats a poor and owns very little land
a peasant cannot refuse to do is anything because it is an order for him
The word "Parliament" comes from latin "Parlare" which means "to talk, to discuss"
There are two syllables in the word peasant PEA-SANT
Peasant in Spanish is: campesino.
"He was an uncultured and illiterate peasant."
Крестьянская мать Krestʹyanskaya matʹ
Krest'yanin
peasant
campesino/a
Peasant or Anapest
gruel
An antonym for the word autocrat would be.. peasant, slave, etc.
Glahdona- it was a German word that was refered to a peasant.