Some word families for "mendicant" include mendicancy (noun form), mendicate (verb form), and mendicity (related noun form).
The word mendicant is a noun. A mendicant is someone who lives by begging.
Word family for "brave":cavecravegavegravepaveravesaveshaveslavestavewave
Some word families for "giddy" include: giddiness (noun), giddily (adverb), and ungiddy (opposite adjective).
Families is a plural noun. The singular for is family.
The Greek and Latin root word for family is 'famil'
To guarantee the families' salvation
The word mendicant is a noun. A mendicant is someone who lives by begging.
The mendicant was begging at his doorstep yesterday, or the mendicant was praying in church.
The mendicant always asks for money at that particular store.
The word "mendicant" belongs to the word family of "mendicancy." The root word "mendicant" is a noun referring to a beggar or someone who relies on charity. The adjective form is "mendicant," describing someone who begs or depends on alms. The related verb is "mendicate," which means to beg or solicit charity.
Peregrine mendicant
What do you call a beggar that can't beg... a mendicant.
mendicant
In French, a Mendicant, sometimes Mendiant, is the popular word for a (Bum) a vagrant type of man. Is sometimes applied to a tramp steamer as un Vaisseau Mendicant- which could also, etymologically, be a repair ship or salvage vessel, but is not.
Mendicant refers to a person who lives by begging for money or food. A sample sentence is: "The mendicant outside the church fell asleep".
The plural word for family is families.
There is not any word families.